1. Active and total T cells in blood and cerebrospinal fluid during the course of aseptic meningitis
- Author
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Rolf Maller, Hans Link, Aril Frydén, and Slavenka Kam-Hansen
- Subjects
Adult ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rosette Formation ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,T-Lymphocytes ,T cell ,Rosette (botany) ,Andrology ,Leukocyte Count ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,Humans ,Medicine ,Meningitis ,Meningitis, Aseptic ,Child ,business.industry ,Aseptic meningitis ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Rosette formation ,Neurology (clinical) ,Immunocompetence ,business - Abstract
Patients with aseptic meningitis (AM) were examined with the active T cell rosette test, which has been claimed to reflect cell-mediated immunocompetence more accurately than determination of total T cells. Higher percentages of active T cells were demonstrated in CSF compared to blood regardless if specimens were obtained on days 1-4, days 5-10, or later than 20 days after onset of symptoms, Active T cell percentages in CSF decreased when values for specimens obtained on days 5-10 were compared with those taken later than 20 days after onset, while no significant variations of active T cell percentages in blood were observed. The percentages of total T cells were higher in CSF than blood in specimens from days 5-10, and later than 20 days after onset, but no significant fluctuations of total T cells occurred in either CSF or blood over the course of AM.
- Published
- 2009
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