SummaryDown syndrome (DS) is the most frequent cause of mental retardation in man. Immunological changes in DS have been observed since the 1970s. The neurological system appears to be ageing precociously, with early occurrence of Alzheimer disease; until now, the observed immunological differences have been interpreted in the same context. Looking back at past and present results of immunological studies in DS children in relation to the clinical consequences they suffer, we conclude that it is more likely that the DS immune system is intrinsically deficient from the very beginning.
Down syndrome (DS) is known for increased incidence of respiratory infections and autoimmune diseases, indicating impaired immunity. Until now, attention has been mainly focused on T lymphocytes. Therefore, we determined B-lymphocyte subpopulations in 95 children with DS compared with 33 age-matched control (AMC) children. DS serum immunoglobulin levels were compared with 962 non-DS children with recurrent infections. The results were combined with clinical data. Transitional and naive B lymphocytes are profoundly decreased in the children with DS. This could be caused by an intrinsic B-lymphocyte defect resulting in (partial) failure of B-lymphocyte generation, decreased antigen-induced proliferation and/or increased apoptosis, or by decreased proliferation due to deficient T-lymphocyte help, or a combination of these. The decreased CD27ϩ , CD21 high , and CD23 ϩ cells are reminiscent of common variable immunodeficiency and suggestive of disturbed peripheral B-lymphocyte maturation. Immunoglobulin levels in DS are abnormal-as has been described before-and different from non-DS children with recurrent infections. We conclude that the humoral immune system is abnormal in DS, but could not find a relation between B-lymphocyte subsets, immunoglobulins and clinical features of the children with DS in our cohort, nor could we answer the question whether DS lymphocytes are truly intrinsically deficient, or could all findings be explained by deficient Tlymphocyte help. (Pediatr Res 67: 563-569, 2010)
Introduction: On April 13, 2017, a bill to legalize cannabis was introduced to the Canadian Parliament and presented to the public. On October 17, 2018, Canada legalized recreational cannabis use. We assessed intoxication severity, reflected by ICU admission rates, risk factors and other characteristics in children who presented to the emergency department (ED) with cannabis intoxication, before and after legalization. Methods: A retrospective cohort study of children 0-18 years who presented to a pediatric ED
More than half of women take medications during breastfeeding, predisposing their infants to medication exposure via breast milk. As a result, adverse drug reactions may emerge in the infant, although they are rarely reported. Disposition of maternal drugs in breast milk is described with several key parameters, which include relative infant dose (RID): infant drug intake via milk (weight‐ and time‐adjusted) expressed as a percentage of the similarly adjusted mother's dose. Most drugs show RID values of <10%, indicating that drug concentrations in infant serum do not reach a level known to be therapeutic in adults unless drug clearance is markedly lower than the adult level on a weight basis. RID is a function of milk‐to‐(maternal) plasma drug concentration ratio (MP ratio) and maternal drug clearance. Therefore, MP ratio between drugs must be interpreted not by itself but with maternal drug clearance of each drug. This is why some drugs such as phenobarbital show an MP ratio of <1 but an RID as high as 50–70%, while morphine shows an MP ratio of 2 but an RID in the range of 5%. Using RID, we interpreted case reports of infant adverse outcomes, and we observed cases with relatively low infant serum concentrations of drug, consistent with low RID, as well as those with near‐ or above‐adult therapeutic serum concentrations, with or without increased drug intake (i.e. high RID). It is important to consider both pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic factors in interpreting adverse outcomes in infants breastfed by a mother taking medications.
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