## Abstract Of 6‐ and 3‐week‐old nude mice given intravenous injections of murine tumor cells with well‐defined metastatic properties, only the 3‐week‐old mice developed lung tumor colonies in significant numbers. The quantitative differences in metastatic potential among tumor cell lines injected
Low levels of natural killer cells in pregnant women transmitting Toxoplasma gondii
✍ Scribed by Giovanni Nigro; Juan Piazze; Rosalba Paesano; Teresa Mango; Sara Provvedi; Oriana Capuano; Lorella Pollastrini
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 159 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-3851
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The role of cell-mediated immunity in the maternal-fetal transmission of Toxoplasma gondii was investigated in 17 pregnant women with primary T. gondii infection, in 7 of whom fetal infection occurred. 18 healthy pregnant women were followed-up as controls. Fetal outcome was uneventful in six women who were treated early in pregnancy with spiramycin, while stillbirth due to T. gondii encephalitis occurred in the offspring of one patient who started with therapy at 34 weeks' gestation. All patients who transmitted T. gondii showed significant changes in the mean levels of immune cells. The most prominent finding was a significantly lower level of natural killer (NK) cells in the mothers transmitting T. gondii to the fetus compared with non-transmitters and controls both in the number (99.7 (71.8-107.5)/ l versus 320.9 (307.9-356.4)/ l and 172.1 (122.4-213.3)/ l; median (25 -75 ), p<0.001) and the percentage of NK cells (4.0 1.5 per cent versus 13.2 2.3 per cent and 10.2 3.4 per cent; mean SD, p<0.001). Although limited by the small number of patients, our data suggest that the assessment of NK cells may be considered as a prognostic marker of primary T. gondii infection in pregnancy.
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