Apart
from being considered a potential threat to ecosystems and
human health, the ubiquity of microplastics presents analytical challenges.
There is a high risk of sample contamination during sampling, sample
preparation, and analysis. In this study, the potential of sample
contamination or misinterpretation due to substances associated with
disposable laboratory gloves or reagents used during sample preparation
was investigated. Leachates of 10 different types of disposable gloves
were analyzed using Raman microspectroscopy (μ-Raman), Fourier-transform
infrared microspectroscopy (μ-FTIR), and pyrolysis–gas
chromatography/mass spectrometry (pyr–GC/MS). There appeared
to be polyethylene (PE) in almost all investigated glove leachates
and with all applied methods. Closer investigations revealed that
the leachates contained long-chain compounds such as stearates or
fatty acids, which were falsely identified as PE by the applied analytical
methods. Sodium dodecyl sulfate, which is commonly applied in microplastic
research during sample preparation, may also be mistaken for PE. Therefore,
μ-Raman, μ-FTIR, and pyr–GC/MS were further tested
for their capability to distinguish among PE, sodium dodecyl sulfate,
and stearates. It became clear that stearates and sodium dodecyl sulfates
can cause substantial overestimation of PE.
The tetanus-PRP conjugate vaccine not only elicited a good primary humoral response, but also induced immunological memory so that the infants were able to mount a large and rapid immune response to subsequent exposure to plain PRP, indicating that protection against circulating wild-type Hib had been generated. Successful induction of immunological memory occurred even when there was no measurable humoral anti-PRP response to the primary course. Tetanus-PRP conjugate vaccine can be used in combination with DTPa-HBV vaccine, when administered separately or as a single injection in the same syringe, in primary immunisation schedules at 3, 4 and 5 months of age.
The aim of this study was to investigate pertussis-specific cell-mediated immunity in infants vaccinated with a tricomponent acellular vaccine. Infants were investigated during a primary vaccination schedule from the third month of life to the sixth month as well as before and after a booster at 15 to 24 months. This is the first report of specific cell-mediated immune responses to pertussis-related antigens in infants below the age of 12 months. Our data show that the vaccine induces T-cell responses specific for the vaccine components, detoxified pertussis toxin, filamentous hemagglutinin, and pertactin, that increase progressively over the course of the vaccination schedule. In contrast to declining antibody titers, cell-mediated immune responses are stable over the postprimary to prebooster period. Vaccination results in a progressive increase in the number of T cells that express activation marker CD45RO preferentially on CD4-positive T cells after stimulation with pertussis antigens. Measurements of cytokine secretion profiles demonstrated a preferential induction of interleukin 2-and gamma interferon-producing T-helper 1 cells and only low production of interleukin 10. The observed persistence of the specific cell-mediated immunity may have a bearing on the protective mechanisms induced by pertussis vaccination. Cell-mediated immunity requires further study, particularly to improve our understanding of the persistence of protection afforded by vaccination up to the administration of booster doses.
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