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Quantitative studies on the movement of fluid and lymphocytes through periodontal tissue and into the draining lymph

✍ Scribed by Binh Au; Christopher A. G. McCulloch; John B. Hay


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
458 KB
Volume
56
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-910X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Chronic lymph drainage techniques in sheep have been used to map the pathways and to quantify the fluid and cell traffic through periodontal tissues. The continuous collection of cervical and prescapular lymph has demonstrated that 65% of labelled protein tracer injected into the periodontal tissues could be found in lymph over a period of 7.5 hours. Nearly 90% of the total radioactivity could be accounted for between the lymph and the tissue site. When silk was impregnated with radiolabelled albumin and a tooth ligated, the kinetics of the subsequent appearance of the tracer in lymph emphasized the ease with which macromolecules surrounding the teeth gain access to the lymphatics, regional lymph nodes, and immune apparatus. Animals were primed with BCG and then tuberculin (delayed hypersensitivity) lesions were simultaneously induced in the skin, bowel, and periodontium. When T cells were labelled with radioisotopes and their migration from blood to lymph measured, the periodontal tissue traffic pattern was distinct from the traffic pattern through DTH in the skin and also distinct from the pattern through the small intestine. This indicates that the lymphocyte traffic through the inflamed periodontium has unique features. This tissue specificity was not apparent when lesions were induced with TNFα. The static assessment of lymphocyte subsets within the tissues was also assessed with immunohistochemistry. Microsc. Res. Tech. 56:66–71, 2002. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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