We treated 16 patients with moderately severe to severe generalized myasthenia gravis (MG) by immunoadsorption (perfusion through a resin that adsorbs proteins) of 2,500 ml plasma on each of four alternate days. Fourteen patients who completed treatment all had significant improvement in strength (6 excellent, 6 good, and 2 fair), which began a mean of 42 hours after the first immunoadsorption, reached a maximum 4 days after the fourth immunoadsorption (mean, 250% of baseline strength), and returned to baseline over a mean of 2 months. Thirty-seven grams of plasma proteins were removed during each immunoadsorption, which required no replacement, compared with 175 grams during plasma exchange, which requires replacement with albumin. Serum or plasma concentration of all proteins fell, more so for most of the larger proteins than for the smaller ones: acetylcholine receptor antibody (AChR Ab) fell to a mean of 23% of original level, fibrinogen to 26%, C4 to 29%, IgM to 33%, IgG to 35%, CH50 to 41%, C3 to 42%, IgA to 54%, and albumin to 76%. All proteins, including AChR Ab, returned to their original levels within 1 to 3 weeks after the last immunoadsorption, while improvement in strength lasted a mean of 6 weeks longer. One seronegative patient had excellent improvement lasting more than a month. Activated complement C5a and white blood cell count rose during each immunoadsorption, while activated complement C3a fell, and each returned to its original level within hours. Eight patients had transient symptomatic hypotension attributable to withdrawal of blood more rapidly than it was returned; this hypotension was prevented or ameliorated by intravenous saline.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
It is reasonable to compare immune reactions between boys and girls because many infections in the early stages are predominant in males. A relationship between immunomodulatory effects of sex hormone surge in boys at early months and infectious diseases is still unclear. We compared clinical features between boys and girls who suffered from wheezing that was initially triggered by acute respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) bronchiolitis. For systemic immune response evaluation, white blood cell (WBC) count, blood eosinophil count, and serum C-reactive protein (CRP) were measured. For local inflammation evaluation, scores for eosinophils and neutrophils in sputum were evaluated microscopically. Patients consisted of 90 boys and 51 girls. Most children were under 6 months of age. WBC counts and serum CRP levels were significantly increased in girls compared with boys. Blood eosinophilia at the acute stage was rarely observed in children after 6 months of age. For local response evaluation, sputum specimens obtained from 42 boys and 29 girls were microscopically examined. Sputum eosinophil score of 2+ and more was observed in boys (6/42) exclusively. In contrast, sputum neutrophilia was commonly observed in boys and girls. From a follow-up study, we confirmed that 28 children with RSV bronchiolitis showed wheezing episodes afterwards. However, their blood and sputum eosinophilia during RSV bronchiolitis did not reflect their subsequent wheezing. We speculated that gender-specific responses to RSV infection might account for male susceptibility. Differences in RSV pathogenicity between boys and girls should be further investigated in terms of asthma progression.
To examine the increase in eosinophils and basophilic cells in the respiratory areas of infants and young children with asthma (n = 111), we analyzed the numbers of eosinophils and basophilic cells in sputum and nasal smears. The number of children with eosinophilia grades of 2+ or greater (> or = 11 cells/five fields in x1000 magnification) in sputum and nasal smears, respectively, in each age group was as follows: 33% and 21% under 1 year, 59% and 64% at 1 year, and 79-80% and 75-78% at 2-3 years. An increased infiltration of basophilic cells according to age was also observed. Infiltration of these cells began earlier than the appearance of IgE antibodies to mite in blood.
Using an autoimmune hepatitis model of A/J mice which was prepared with immunization by syngeneic crude liver proteins, various influences of neonatal thymectomy were studied by observations of histological liver changes, autoantibody to liver-specific membrane lipoprotein (LSP), delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) to LSP, and purified protein derivative (PPD), and suppressor activity to LSP. The liver changes in the thymectomized mice were more intense than those in the non-thymectomized controls. Production of the anti-LSP autoantibodies and positive DTH to syngeneic LSP could be recognized in both groups of the thymectomized mice and the non-thymectomized controls, but the levels of those were higher in the former. In the level of DTH to PPD the thymectomized mice were lower than the non-thymectomized controls. Adoptive transfer experiments showed that suppressor activity to LSP was reduced in the spleen cells of neonatally thymectomized mice. This experiment suggests that neonatal thymectomy is apt to abolish tolerance to LSP on account of depressed suppressor activity to autoantigen, and accordingly liver damage is increased Keywords experimental hepatitis liver-specific membrane lipoprotein neonatal thymectomy suppressor cells
Children who are destined to develop asthma are considered to be susceptible to a variety of respiratory pathogens. To elucidate respiratory inflammation among these children, we measured the levels of eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) and tryptase in sputum taken from three different groups of wheezy infants and young children: those with a first wheeze (n = 15); those with recurrent wheeze (n = 27); and those with recurrent wheeze with respiratory distress, namely asthma (n = 56). The numbers of eosinophils or metachromatic cells determined by microscopic analysis of sputum samples were also evaluated in combination with the ECP and tryptase levels. Although neither sputum ECP nor tryptase was a clear discriminative marker that differentiated the three different types of wheezy disease, ECP levels in sputum from the asthma group were significantly higher (2,269.2 +/- 6,216.8 ng/g) than those in the recurrent wheezy group (440.3 +/- 1,199.8 ng/g) or in the first-wheeze group (209.0 +/- 172.9 ng/g). A similar trend was observed with tryptase levels in sputum, but there were no significant differences among the three groups. Sputum taken from asthmatic children showed a marked accumulation of eosinophils. However, an accumulation of eosinophils in sputum (even in the presence of an elevated level of sputum ECP) was not identified in the asthmatic infants < 1 year of age. An accumlation of eosinophils in sputum was not evident until children became > 1 year old and thereafter the eosinophils rapidly increased in number until the children reached 5 years of age. It was noteworthy that sputa positive for pathogenic bacteria, taken from the 1- and 2-year-old asthmatic infants, had a tendency to show high levels of ECP but a reduced number of eosinophils. Along with the wheezy episodes induced by viral infection, primarily and occasionally in combination with secondary bacterial infection, eosinophil activation and infiltration may develop. These predestined immune reactions to various pathogens might be associated with triggering the onset of asthma.
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