A decrease of the %uptake in segments 3, 4, 5, and 10 after supine imaging is presumed to result from attenuation artifact or RCA disease. We established evaluation criteria for the addition of prone imaging in patients with decreased accumulation in the inferior wall during supine imaging.
Summary
An immunologic study was made on 170 epileptic patients treated with antiepileptic drugs. The most noteworthy finding was that the serum IgA was decreased in 22 patients, and an IgA deficiency noticed in 12 of them. The blastic transformation rate of lymphocytes in PHA‐containing cultures appeared low in seven out of 12 patients. Other findings included decreased serum IgM and IgG in some patients.
These abnormalities were not encountered in epileptic patients taking no anti‐epileptic drugs. Therefore, they could be considered as the side effects of antiepileptic drugs. In all patients manifesting these abnormalities, diphenylhydantoin was used in common.
It was surmised that the above‐mentioned immunologic abnormalities caused by anti‐epileptic drugs, especially diphenylhydantoin, had resulted from disorders of the antibody producing organs in the bone mar‐row‐thymus‐lymphatic system.
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