The role of breast milk antirotavirus immunoglobulin A (IgA) and trypsin inhibitors in limiting the acquisition of rotavirus infection during the initial 5 days of life was evaluated among 42 exclusively breast-fed hospital-born infants, 22 of whom experienced rotavirus infection. The mean concentrations of antirotavirus IgA (ELISA Units) in the breast milk of mothers of the 22 rotavirus-infected neonates was 130.4 +/- 46.4; the corresponding value in 20 noninfected neonates was 384.3 +/- 328.3 (P less than 0.001). Similarly, the trypsin inhibitory capacity (mumols/mt/ml) of breast milk in the rotavirus-infected group was significantly lower (0.109 +/- 0.095) than that in the noninfected group (0.376 +/- 0.191; P less than 0.001). The trypsin inhibitory capacity of milk showed an inverse correlation with infant stool tryptic activity (P less than 0.01). Our results indicate that the acquisition of rotavirus infection during the early neonatal period depends on the concentrations of antirotavirus IgA and trypsin inhibitors in human milk and that protection is mediated by high levels of these antiviral factors.
Serum anti-gliadin antibody (AGA) titres were estimated by diffusion in a gel enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in children with coeliac disease (n = 11), protracted diarrhoea of non-coeliac causes (n = 110), acute gastroenteritis (n = 20), protein energy malnutrition (n = 20), and asymptomatic, well-nourished children (n = 66). The mean IgG and IgA AGA titres were significantly higher (p less than 0.001) in children with coeliac disease than in any other groups. There was no significant difference (p greater than 0.01) in AGA titres in relation to age, nutritional status, or severity of villous injury. In patients with coeliac disease AGA titres showed a good correlation with disease activity. The specificity and sensitivity of the assay are discussed.
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