From 28 young children in the Netherlands, we isolated a paramyxovirus that was identified as a tentative new member of the Metapneumovirus genus based on virological data, sequence homology and gene constellation. Previously, avian pneumovirus was the sole member of this recently assigned genus, hence the provisional name for the newly discovered virus: human metapneumovirus. The clinical symptoms of the children from whom the virus was isolated were similar to those caused by human respiratory syncytial virus infection, ranging from upper respiratory tract disease to severe bronchiolitis and pneumonia. Serological studies showed that by the age of five years, virtually all children in the Netherlands have been exposed to human metapneumovirus and that the virus has been circulating in humans for at least 50 years.
Objective: Immunophenotyping of blood lymphocytes is an important tool in the diagnosis of hematologic and immunologic disorders. Because of maturation and expansion of the immune system in the first years of life, the relative and the absolute size of lymphocyte subpopulations vary during childhood. Therefore we wished to obtain reference values for the relative and the absolute size of all relevant blood lymphocyte subpopulations in childhood.
Study design:We used the lysed whole blood method for analysis of lymphocyte subpopulations in 429 blood samples from neonates (n = 20), healthy children (n = 358), and adults (n = 51). The following age groups were used: I week to 2 months (n = 13), 2 to 5 months (n = 46), 5 to 9 months (n = 105), 9 to 15 months (n = 70), 15 to 24 months (n = 33), 2 to 5 years (n = 33), 5 to 10 years (n = 35), and 10 to 16 years (n = 23).Results: Our results show that the absolute number of CD19* B lymphocytes increases twofold immediately after birth, remains stable until 2 years of age, and subsequently gradually decreases 6.5-fold from 2 years to adult age. The CD3* T lymphocytes increase 1.5-fold immediately after birth and decrease threefold from 2 years to adult age. The absolute size of the CD3*/CD4* T-lymphocyte subpopulation follows the same pattern as the total CD3 + population, but the CD3+/CD8 * T lymphocytes remain stable from birth up to 2 years of age, followed by a gradual threefold decrease toward adult levels. In contrast to B and T lymphocytes, the absolute number of natural killer cells decreases almost threefold in the first 2 months of life and remains stable thereafter. Our study also showed that changes in the absolute size of lymphocyte subpopulations are not always consistent with changes in their relative size. This demonstrates that the relative counts of lymphocyte subsets do not reflect their actual size and are therefore of limited value.
Conclusion:On the basis of this study we strongly recommend that immunophenotyping of blood lymphocytes for the diagnosis of hematologic and immunologic disorders be based on the absolute rather than on the relative size of lymphocyte subpopulations. Our data can be used as age-matched reference values for blood lymphocyte immunophenotyping. (J Pediatr 1997; 130:388-93)
During a 17-month period, we performed retrospective analyses of the prevalence of and clinical symptoms associated with human metapneumovirus (hMPV) infection, among patients in a university hospital in The Netherlands. All available nasal-aspirate, throat-swab, sputum, and bronchoalveolar-lavage samples (N=1515) were tested for hMPV RNA by reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. hMPV RNA was detected in 7% of samples from patients with respiratory tract illnesses (RTIs) and was the second-most-detected viral pathogen in these patients during the last 2 winter seasons. hMPV was detected primarily in very young children and in immunocompromised individuals. In young children, clinical symptoms associated with hMPV infection were similar to those associated with human respiratory syncytial virus (hRSV) infection, but dyspnea, feeding difficulties, and hypoxemia were reported more frequently in hRSV-infected children. Treatment with antibiotics and corticosteroids was reported more frequently in hMPV-infected children. From these data, we conclude that hMPV is an important pathogen associated with RTI.
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