In the present study we quantitatively assessed to what extent freeze-storage at liquid nitrogen temperature influences the survival and function of fetal mesencephalic grafts in the dopamine-depleted rat striatum. Ventral mesencephalic (VM) tissue was dissected from rat fetuses and stored overnight in a preservative medium at 4 degrees C (hibernation). It was grafted intrastriatally either as a fresh cell suspension or was frozen as tissue fragments or as a cell suspension after stepwise incubation in ascending concentrations of dimethyl-sulphoxide. Following a cryopreservation interval of 80 days in liquid nitrogen, the frozen samples were rapidly thawed, rinsed, and grafted. Cellular viabilities of graft cell suspensions, as assessed by ethidium bromide/acridine orange staining, were decreased from 90% in fresh tissue to 38-35% in frozen and thawed tissue. Amphetamine-induced turning behavior at 6 weeks post-grafting was significantly attenuated in hosts that had received fresh grafts or grafts that were frozen as tissue fragments. Tyrosine hydroxylase-(TH-) immunocytochemistry of recipient brains revealed significant decreases in TH-positive graft cell numbers in rats grafted with cryopreserved tissue (38-42% of fresh tissue). Moreover, the dye exclusion viability of thawed VM tissue was found to accurately predict the subsequent graft survival. There was no difference with respect to graft cell numbers between the two freezing methods employed, though block storage seems to be more simple from a practical point of view.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
A comparative study of infectious morbidity and mortality in neutropenic patients with acute leukemia receiving chemotherapy was undertaken to test the effects of a suppression of endogenous and ambient microorganisms. Patients were allocated to receive [1] oral antibiotics (neomycin, colistin, and nystatin) in conventional ward isolation; [2] no antimicrobial suppression but conventional ward isolation; [3] strict isolation, filtered air, sterilized food and oral antibiotics. Significantly fewer infections with Gram-negative bacilli were seen in patients with strict isolation plus endogenous microbial suppression versus patients receiving selective gut decontamination versus patients without nonabsorbable antibiotics in simple reverse isolation. The death rate from infection was significantly reduced in patients who received antibiotics for gut flora suppression in conventional ward isolation compared with the corresponding control group. In addition, a significant improvement of leukemic remission rate was seen in this group. The protocol for decontamination was well tolerated.
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