ABSTRACT. To test the hypothesis that neutrophils and macrophages in human milk may not defend by classical inflammatory mechanisms, experiments were conducted to ascertain whether adherence, orientation, and directed motility of these leukocytes would be enhanced by exposure to chemoattractant peptides including N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-phenylalanine and N-formyl-L-methionyl-L-leucyl-L-phenylalanine and C5a generated from zymosan activated human serum. Adherence and spatial orientation were tested on coverglasses and in Zigmond chambers, and chemotaxis was examined by Boyden chambers and a subagarose technique. Whereas, the adherence, orientation, and directed movement of adult peripheral blood neutrophils and monocytes were significantly enhanced by those chemotactic agents, human milk leukocytes failed to respond. The failure of the response of human milk leukocytes was not due to alterations in maternal peripheral blood leukocytes but appeared to be due partially to inhibitors in human milk. The experiments suggest that human milk leukocytes may be modified in the mammary gland to protect by noninflammatory mechanisms. There is considerable evidence that breast-fed infants, particularly in underdeveloped countries, are protected against gastrointestinal pathogens (for review, see References 1-3). The manner in which this protection occurs is not known despite a host of descriptive studies of the immunologic system in human milk. Epidemiologic investigations suggest, however, that the protection may not depend upon the induction of inflammation by host resistance factors in human milk. For example, when infants from rural Central America received human milk natu-
This study compares the semen levels of lead (Pb), cadmium (Cd), and aluminum (Al) in relation to live sperm in semen samples from 64 apparently healthy men. The measured levels were separated into live sperm count tertiles (<25% [18 subjects], 25-50% [26 subjects], and >50% [20 subjects]). The mean +/- SD for each group was calculated, and the difference between the means of the high and low tertiles were compared by ANOVA. Significant differences were observed between the high and low live sperm groups for Pb (p < 0.01) and Al (p < 0.05), but not Cd. Spearman's rank correlation between sperm viability and the semen plasma metal levels showed a direct relation to Mg (p < 0.05). However, there was an inverse relation to lead (p < 0.001), cadmium (p < 0.01), and aluminum (p < 0.01). There was no significant correlation between Ca and Zn. Linear regression between the live sperm counts and semen level of the three metals show that metal levels were inversely correlated with the percentage of live sperm (p < 0.001, < 0.01). Apparently, the presence of these metals in the environment and in seminal plasma exerts a toxic effect on sperm.
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