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Title: [Physiology and pathology of bactericidal activity in human polymorphonuclear neutrophils (author's transl)]. Author: Hakim J. Journal: Nouv Presse Med; 1980 Sep 13; 9(32):2241-5. PubMed ID: 6252540. Abstract: Blood polymorphonuclear neutrophils defend man against aggressions from pathogens. Under the combined influence of granulocytic and non-granulocytic factors, the defensive process develops by steps: the neutrophil moves towards the pathogenic organism which, one reached, is engulfed and killed. The killing systems of the cell are either oxygen-dependent or independent. the oxygen-dependent system is triggered off by stimulation of the cell membrane and involves various reactions, including cyanide-resistant oxygen consumption, production of activated oxygen, oxygen peroxide and halogenisation of the pathogen membrane. Impairment of the killing activity requires quantitative assessment of its various components in the presence of autologous or control serum with the view of: determining the origin (granulocytic or non-granulocytic) of the impairment, and identifying the step in oxygen metabolism that is affected. In the vast majority of non-granulocytic insufficiencies the cause lies in defective opsonins. In granulocytic insufficiencies, global failure of the system indicates chromic granulomatous disease, a syndrome that is now being dismembered. Defective halogenisation should lead to testing for deficiency of myeloperoxidase or abnormal degranulation. The non oxygen-independent bactericidal system, although highly effective in vitro, appears to be less important in vivo than the oxygen-dependent system. Little is known of its pathology.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]