These studies were undertaken to investigate the effect of acute bacterial infections on the absolute number of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) in an elderly population and to evaluate the prognostic significance of a decreased number of PBL in critically ill aged patients. The results show that a significant lymphopenia develops in elderly patients during the course of an acute bacterial infection whereas the same type of acute illness has no effect on the PBL count of younger subjects. The lymphopenia is not related to a particular localization of the infection nor to the type of bacterial pathogen. The prognosis of the bacterial infection is closely linked to the severity of the lymphocyte depletion and its outcome can nearly be predicted by monitoring the variation of the number of circulating lymphocytes during the early course of the disease.
We have recorded control subjects, neurological and psychiatric patients (n = 217 sequences recorded over both hemispheres). Minicomputers (HP Fourier analyzer, HP 1000) for spectral analysis provided 10 spectral parameters over 5 spectral frequency bands (δ, Θ, α, β1, Β2, raw EEG). For each recorded sequence, 90 EEG maps could be computed over both hemispheres. Topo-EEGs were stored in an EEG image data bank. An EEG mapping microcomputer system linked with a digital polygraph (Alvar Electronic, REEGA 2000) has been used simultaneously. White noises have been fed into both computers for testing spatial resolution. Ten topo-EEGs have been recorded in control subjects and patients. The microcomputer system has provided very reliable topographical results when compared to similar maps generated by the minicomputer. A common average reference has been used. First clinical applications have been studied (brain strokes, brain tumors). The method appears very reliable in comparison with CT scans.
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