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Title: Alteration of T cell subsets and immunoglobulin synthesis in vitro during high dose gamma-globulin therapy in patients with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. Author: Tsubakio T, Kurata Y, Katagiri S, Kanakura Y, Tamaki T, Kuyama J, Kanayama Y, Yonezawa T, Tarui S. Journal: Clin Exp Immunol; 1983 Sep; 53(3):697-702. PubMed ID: 6193913. Abstract: T cell subsets of peripheral lymphocytes were studied using monoclonal antibodies (OKT3, OKT4, OKT8) and immunoglobulin (IgG, IgM, IgA) synthesis in vitro by peripheral mononuclear cells stimulated with pokeweed mitogen was studied in adult patients with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura before and after high-dose intravenous intact gamma(gamma-)globulin therapy, at a daily dose of 0.4g/kg body weight for 5 consecutive days. A transient increase in platelet count which reached a peak on the 1st to 2nd days after the end of the therapy was observed in four of five patients. Immunoglobulin synthesis in vitro was suppressed remarkably following therapy in all cases: the mean reduction of IgG, IgM and IgA was 78, 66 and 48%, respectively. Titres of various autoantibodies, TGHA, MCHA, ANF and anti-DNA antibody, also decreased following therapy. In correspondence to this, phenotypic analysis in T cell subsets showed a decrease of OKT4+:OKT8+ ratio following therapy, without a change in the proportion of OKT3+ cells. These data indicate that the intravenous gamma-globulin preparations suppressed synthesis of antibodies non-specifically and caused a relative increase of OKT8+ suppressor T cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]