1957
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.79.5.434
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Human Plasmapheresis and Its Effect on Antibodies

Abstract: Summary Results on the biweekly plasmapheresis for 1 yr on each of 23 donors have demonstrated the safety and feasibility of the method utilizing the ADL-Cohn Fractionator. Bacterial and viral antibodies have persisted at peak levels for almost 2 yr following the administration of antigen, despite the fact that the donors were not subjected to plasmapheresis the 2nd year. A rationale for antibody production by plasmapheresis is presented. Theoretic and practical considerations are discussed.

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Cited by 33 publications
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“…Five retrospective studies investigated donors who frequently underwent plasmapheresis for 1 year, focusing on either iron metabolism [54][55][56][57], haematological parameters [57,58] or other proteins [57]. Eight papers reported a study period of more than 1 year and up to 23 years, looking at a wide variety of outcomes and including four prospective studies [32,[59][60][61], three retrospective cohorts [62][63][64] and one cohort with unclear classification [31].…”
Section: Controlled Observational Studies (N = 16)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Five retrospective studies investigated donors who frequently underwent plasmapheresis for 1 year, focusing on either iron metabolism [54][55][56][57], haematological parameters [57,58] or other proteins [57]. Eight papers reported a study period of more than 1 year and up to 23 years, looking at a wide variety of outcomes and including four prospective studies [32,[59][60][61], three retrospective cohorts [62][63][64] and one cohort with unclear classification [31].…”
Section: Controlled Observational Studies (N = 16)mentioning
confidence: 99%