SummaryUnder-agarose random migration, chemokinesis and chemotaxis of monocytes from 36 patients with Down's syndrome were compared to those of monocytes from 42 healthy, age-matched control children. Random migration of monocytes from patients with Down's syndrome was comparable to that of controls. In contrast, chemotaxis of monocytes from patients with Down's syndrome was significantly decreased (P < 0.001) when com~ared to that of controis, even though chemokinesis was significantly increased (P < 0.001). Age, sex, and physical development of patients with Down's syndrome or of control children included in this study had no apparent effect upon monocyte mobility. Abbreviations CS, control serum DS, Down's syndrome MP, mononuclear phagocytes ZAS, zymosan-activated serum Increased susceptibility to infection in patients with DS (22,28) may reflect several abnormalities in host defense mechanisms involving humoral and cellular immune responses (2, 17) and the inflammatory-phagocytic process (13,15,27). No defect can be singled out as the most important one, hence the definition of the immunodeficiency of DS as a complex sum of several immunologic faults of variable intensity that can change with age (4). Cellmediated immunity in DS is predominantly impaired at its effector site (34): depressed in vitro lymphocyte responses, anergy or weak delayed type hypersensitivity skin reactions and decrease in circulating T cells have been reported in patients with DS (16,17), although lymphocytosis with high counts of T and B cells may be found in older, institutionalized patients (34).MP and lymphocytes constitute the bulk of the inflammatory cells in delayed hypersensitivity reactions, MP playing a crucial role in phagocytosis as well (5). Accumulation of mononuclear cells at such inflammatory sites depends largely on their response to chemotactic signals. Poor mobilization of these cells may contribute to the weakness of delayed hypersensitivity and other inflammatory reactions in DS (6). We measured random migration, chemokinesis (enhancement of random migration) and chemotaxis (directional migration) of MP from patients with DS and compared them to those of healthy age-matched children. We employed the agarose-plate method (21), which is less expensive, simpler, and more reproducible than the Boyden chamber method, even though the relative sensitivity of the two assays is still somewhat controversial (14,19). Only MP of a mononuclear leukocytes population seem to contribute to the migration pattern using the agarose device (21). MATERIALS AND METHODSPatients and controls. Thirty-six home-cared patients with DS (Trisomy 21: 14 females, 22 males, 6 months to 7 years of age) were studied. None of the patients had leukemia, suffered of overt infection or took any medication within 2 wk of the study. Fortytwo healthy children (15 females, 27 males, 6 months to 7 years of age) undergoing elective orthopaedic surgery, and matched as closely as possible with the patients for similar age and sex were used as controls. Differe...
Concanavalin A and wheat germ agglutinin, lectins that interact with serum glycoprotein in a manner similar to the antigen--antibody reaction, were used as "antibodies" in a single radial immunodiffusion technique to test a coded serum panel (from the National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Md., and the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.) containing a) 99 serum samples from patients with different types of malignant neoplasms of the gastrointestinal tract, prostate gland, and lung, b) 50 samples from patients with benign diseases of the same organs as those affected in the cancer patients, and c) 50 samples from apparently healthy smokers. The resulting precipitation rings were not correlated to serum protein concentration, and the differences (demonstrated by Student's t-test and with a generalization of the one-sided two-sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistic for evaluating diagnostic tests) established that serum glycoproteins are glycosylated differently in cancer patients than in people without cancer.
Perinatal stress may induce a surge of hormonal responses which includes the thyroid hormones. Information is inadequate
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