Quantitation of Human Peripheral Blood T and B Lymphocytes
Autor: | Ronald S. Berardi, Bruce S. Rabin, Theresa L. Whiteside |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 1975 |
Předmět: |
Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty Erythrocytes T-Lymphocytes Lymphocyte Immunology Fluorescent Antibody Technique Receptors Antigen B-Cell Centrifugation Cell Separation Common method Diatrizoate Peripheral blood mononuclear cell Leukocyte Count Animals Ficoll Humans Immunology and Allergy Medicine Immunoelectrophoresis B-Lymphocytes Sheep business.industry Complement System Proteins General Medicine Immune Adherence Reaction Peripheral blood Immunoglobulin A Leukemia Lymphoid medicine.anatomical_structure Immunoglobulin M Immunoglobulin G business |
Zdroj: | International Archives of Allergy and Immunology. 48:731-738 |
ISSN: | 1423-0097 1018-2438 |
DOI: | 10.1159/000231361 |
Popis: | Centrifugation of heparinized peripheral blood on Ficoll-Hypaque under defined conditions is a most common method of lymphocyte purification in clinical studies. A loss of 25–30% of lymphocytes may occur during this procedure due to incomplete recovery of lymphocytes from the plasma layer after the gradient centrifugation and/or to poor recovery during the washing process. The loss is not selective since T and B cells are lost in the same proportions as determined by several different methods for T and B cell identification. Quantitation of T and B lymphocytes in terms of total number/mm3 of peripheral blood is necessary in order to determine deficiencies in either of these two cell populations. The percentage values are inadequate in clinical evaluations. Thus, patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia show elevated absolute number of T cells as compared to normals, even though the percentage values are much lower. The absolute numbers of T and B cells as well as percentages ought to be reported in all clinical studies. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |