The role of PTH in depressing polynuclear leucocyte (PMN) phagocytosis in uremia was investigated. The hydrophobicity and phagocytic activity of normal PMN was tested in presence of uremic patients' serum with low (Group A) or high (Group B) levels of plasma PTH. The PMN phagocytic index was lowered by serum of both groups, but more in presence of Group B serum (p A vs B less than 0.002). Similarly, the contact angle of cells was affected more in presence of serum of patients with high PTH levels (p B vs A less than 0.003; p B vs C less than 0.002).
Two anephric patients in the course of one year erythropoietin therapy improved their anemic status without changes in Mean Arterial Blood Pressure. The discordant time course behaviour of hematocrit and blood pressure points to the importance of residual renal tissue for blood pressure to develop during erythropoietin therapy in the renoprival status.
Cell proliferation is significantly depressed in uremia; to assess the influence of PTH on it, normal lymphocytes were cultured in presence of uremic patients' serum with low or high plasma PTH levels (Group A; PTH less than 2.5 ng/ml; Group B: PTH greater than 12 ng/ml), and serum of normal subjects (Group C). Cell proliferation was lowered by serum from both groups (p A vs C less than 0.004; p B vs C less than 0.001). However, the depressing effect was more evident when group B serum was employed (p A vs B less than 0.002).
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