We have studied the effects of treating DBA/2 mice with high doses of cyclophosphamide upon their subsequent ability to generate cytotoxic cells in vitro against syngeneic tumour antigens or alloantigens. High doses of cyclophosphamide (100-200 mg/kg body weight) eliminated the response to both antigens. The addition of normal DBA/2 thymocytes into these cultures restored the response to allogeneic cells but not to tumour cells. The anti-tumour response could be restored by the addition of interleukin 2 to the cultures. Treatment with high doses of cyclophosphamide decreased the number of anti-tumour cytotoxic cell precursors in the spleen, but did not affect the capacity of bulk cultures of spleen cells to produce interleukin 2 when stimulated with the mitogen concanavalin A.
A 2‐year‐old boy who had increasing difficulty walking and had large, warm, sterile knee and ankle effusions was found to have active vertebral tuberculosis and a large prevertebral abscess. Lymphocyte proliferation assays demonstrated increased purified protein derivative‐induced reactivity of synovial fluid lymphocytes compared with peripheral blood lymphocytes. The arthritis responded rapidly to antituberculous and antiinflammatory drugs. This patient's disease represented an example of tuberculous rheumatism (Poncet's disease).
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