The age-related changes in absolute and percentage values of lymphocyte subsets in the peripheral blood of healthy children of different ages (1 month to 13 years) were studied by flow cytometry. The absolute and percentage values for most lymphocyte subpopulations differed substantially with age. Comparisons among age groups from infants through adults revealed progressive declines in the absolute numbers of leukocytes, total lymphocytes, and T, B, and natural killer (NK) cells. The percentages of T cells increased with age. Within the T-lymphocyte population, the CD8+ subset increased but the CD4+ subset decreased, resulting in a declining CD4+/CD8+ ratio. The percentage of B cells declined, but that of NK cells remained unchanged. The percentage of HLA-DR+ T cells increased over time, but their number changed inconsistently. Our findings confirm and extend earlier reports on age-related changes in lymphocyte subpopulations. These data should be useful in the interpretation of disease-related changes, as well as therapy-dependent alterations, in lymphocyte subsets in children of different age groups.
Background: Child abuse is prevalent worldwide, although it is often underreported. We describe the pattern of child abuse and neglect presenting to the emergency room of our hospital, the sociocultural changes which brought this about, and suggest ways to deal with this emotionally sensitive issue. Patients and Methods: Thirteen cases of child abuse and neglect were seen in the emergency room of King Khalid University Hospital over a period of one year from July 1996 to June 1997. There were four cases of non-accidental injury, three of which had serious injury. There were three cases of sexual abuse, four cases of neglect, resulting in the death of one child and severe emaciation in another. There was one suspected case of Munchausen syndrome by proxy, and one case of child labor with neglect. Conclusion: Public awareness of the problem of child abuse has increased, and recent media reports reflect the significance accorded to the issue. As more information is obtained on this subject and policies and guidelines are set in place, efforts at reporting and preventing physical and psychological trauma will gather momentum.
In an attempt to establish the reference ranges for lymphocyte subsets in children, the distribution of lymphocyte population-bearing surface markers such as CD3 (T cells), CD19 (B cells), CD4 (T helper/inducer cells), CD8 (T suppressor/cytotoxic cells), and CD16 and/or CD56 on CD3- cells (NK cells) has been studied among healthy Saudi Arabian infants and children. Normal adult blood donors were used for comparison. Anticoagulated peripheral blood was stained with monoclonal antibodies and the lymphocytes were analyzed by flow cytometry for the expression of the above markers. Absolute and percentage values for most lymphocyte populations differed substantially not only between children and adults but also among children from different age groups. Absolute numbers of all the lymphocyte subsets decreased with age from 1 month to 13 years; the median value declined from 4.1 to 1.9 (T cells), 1.6 to 0.6 (B cells), 0.5 to 0.3 (NK cells), 2.7 to 1.0 (CD4+ T cells) and 1.5 to 0.8 x 10(3) cells/mm3 (CD8+ T cells). HLA-DR+ T cell counts changed significantly from 0.3 to 0.2 x 10 (3) cells/mm3 during the same age period. In contrast, the lymphocyte percentage increased in all the subsets except B cells and CD4+ T cells with time. The percentage values increased from 66 to 74 (T cells), 8 to 11 (NK cells), 23 to 39 (CD8+ T cells) and 4 to 9 (HLA-DR+ T cells). The values changed from 24 to 12 and 46 to 39 for B cells and CD4+ T cells, respectively, with age from 1 month to 13 years. The variations in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells resulted in a decrease in CD4+/CD8+ ratio from 2.0 to 1.1 with age. These data should be useful as reference values for lymphocyte subsets in various diseases of infants and children.
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