Role of lymphocyte blastogenesis to Toxoplasma gondii antigens in containment of chronic, latent T. gondii infection in humans. |
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Authors: | R McLeod and R G Estes |
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Abstract: | Lymphocyte blastogenic transformation in response to Toxoplasma lysate antigen was markedly impaired in six of eight patients with chronic, latent Toxoplasma gondii infection and treated Hodgkin's disease. None of these patients with serum antibody to T. gondii measured by the Sabin Feldman Dye test and impaired lymphocyte transformation to T. gondii antigens had clinical or serologic evidence of disseminated, active infection with T. gondii. Partial depletion of adherent mononuclear leukocytes improved the impaired lymphocyte transformation of three of six patients; treatment of cultures from all patients with indomethacin improved their blastogenic transformation but culture with normal heterologous serum did not. These studies indicate that lymphocyte blastogenic response to T. gondii antigens is impaired in some patients with chronic, latent T. gondii infection and treated Hodgkin's disease but that this impairment of lymphocyte function is not sufficient to cause reactivation of chronic, latent T. gondii infection. |
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