1.A study on the change of the lymphocyte subsets after splenectomy by flow cytometer.
Hoi Sang JEONG ; Baik Hwan CHO ; Yong HWANG
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1992;43(4):574-584
No abstract available.
Lymphocyte Subsets*
;
Lymphocytes*
;
Splenectomy*
2.Changes in lymphocyte subsets following open-heart surgery; a study for changes in lymphocyte subsets.
Jae Joon HWANG ; Jae Seung SHIN ; Gun LEE ; Hyung Joo PARK ; Young Ho CHOI ; Hark Jei KIM ; Hyoung Mook KIM
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 1992;25(11):1185-1191
No abstract available.
Lymphocyte Subsets*
;
Lymphocytes*
3.Lymphocyte subsets in schizophrenic patients.
Gyung Joon PARK ; Young Cho CHUNG
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 1991;30(2):263-270
No abstract available.
Humans
;
Lymphocyte Subsets*
;
Lymphocytes*
4.Immediate effect of appendectomy on lymphocyte subset populations.
Jung Soo KANG ; Baik Hwan CHO ; Nam Poo KANG
Journal of the Korean Surgical Society 1993;45(5):709-714
No abstract available.
Appendectomy*
;
Lymphocyte Subsets*
;
Lymphocytes*
5.A study on cord blood collections
Journal of Vietnamese Medicine 2000;254(12):15-18
A total of 54 cord blood collections were analysed for lymphocyte subsets. No significant differences in percentages of major lymphocyte subsets were found on CB in comparison with peripheral blood (CD 2+ 65%+/- 60, CD 3+ 69% +/- 5,4, CD 4+ 57%+/-7.6, CD 7+ 78% +/- 7.4 CD 8+ 16% +/- 6.1CD 16/56+ and CD 3+ 0.9% +/- 0.5, CD 19+ 16% +/- 3.9). The CD4: CD8 ratio is 3.56 compared with 1.4 in adult PB.CD 3+ with cytotoxic activity as determined by the expression of CD 56 are practically absent on CB.
Fetal Blood
;
Lymphocyte Subsets
6.A study on T cell subsets and natural killer(NK) cells of peripheral blood in patients with various cancer.
Jin Yeong HAN ; Soon Ho KIM ; Han Chul SON ; Eun Yup LEE ; Jung Man KIM
Korean Journal of Clinical Pathology 1991;11(1):183-195
No abstract available.
Humans
;
T-Lymphocyte Subsets*
7.The change of lymphocyte subpopulation of the thermal injured rats by exchange transfusion.
Ki Taek HAN ; Kyung Seul CHUNG ; Jung Gil CHUNG ; Sang Tae AHN ; Poong LIM
Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons 1992;19(3):327-337
No abstract available.
Animals
;
Lymphocyte Subsets*
;
Lymphocytes*
;
Rats*
8.Lymphocyte subpopulation in healthy adults donors of Ho Chi Minh city Viet Nam
Journal of Medical Research 2003;26(6):27-32
The objective of study was to establish reference ranged for the lymphocyte subset (TCD3, TCD4, TCD8, B, NK) in peripheral blood of adult donors. This reference is used like target values for patients examinated in HCM city’s Pasteur Institute and then the results were compared with those obtained in Iranian healthy adults. Healthy person’s blood was processed with EDTA anticoagulation then incubated with 2 groups of antibodies from blood donors contained in 2 diverse tubes CD3/CD8/CD45/CD4 and CD3/CD16,56/CD45/CD19. Then through FASC apparatus, the samples were analyzed, and TCD3, TCD4, TCD8, B, NK were determined in each sample diversely.
Tissue Donors
;
Adult
;
Lymphocyte Subsets
9.Analysis of the correlation between lymphocyte subsets and severity of corona virus disease 19.
Fang BAO ; Wei Li SHI ; Jing HU ; Di ZHANG ; Dong Han GAO ; Yun Xia XIA ; Hong Mei JING ; Xiao Yan KE ; Qing Gang GE ; Ning SHEN
Journal of Peking University(Health Sciences) 2020;52(6):1075-1081
OBJECTIVE:
To understand the differences in lymphocyte subsets in patients with different clinical classifications of corona virus disease 19 (COVID-19).
METHODS:
Eighty-one patients with COVID-19 who were admitted to the isolation ward under the responsibility of three medical aid teams in the Tongji Hospital, Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, from February 8, 2020 to March 28, 2020, were selected to collect clinical data. According to the relevant diagnostic criteria, the disease status of the patients was classified into moderate cases (n=35), severe cases (n=39) and critical cases (n=7) when lymphocyte subset testing was performed. Their blood routine tests, lymphocyte subsets and other indicators were tested to compare whether there were differences in each indicator between the patients of different clinical classification groups.
RESULTS:
The differences in the absolute count of total lymphocytes, T-lymphocytes, CD4+T-lymphocytes, CD8+T-lymphocytes and natural killer (NK) cells among the three groups of patients were all statistically significant (P < 0.05), and the critical cases were significantly lower than the moderate and severe cases in the above indicators, and the indicators showed a decreasing trend with the severity of the disease. In 22 patients, the six indicators of the absolute count of T-lymphocytes, B-lymphocytes, CD4+T-lymphocytes, CD8+T-lymphocytes and NK cells, CD4+/CD8+ ratio were all within the normal reference range in the first test, and 59 patients had abnormalities of the above indicators, with the absolute count of NK cells and CD8+ T lymphocytes decreasing most frequently (61%, 56%). The patients with the absolute count of NK cells and CD8+ T lymphocytes below the normal reference range were one group, and the remaining abnormal patients were the other group. There were more critical cases in the former group (moderate : severe : critical cases were 4 : 8 : 7 vs. 19 : 21 : 0, respectively, P=0.001), and all the deaths were in this group (6 cases vs. 0 case, P=0.001). The absolute B lymphocyte count was below the normal reference range in 15 patients, and the remaining 64 cases were within the normal range. The ratio of moderate, severe and critical cases in the reduced group was 4 : 7 : 4, and the ratio of critical cases was more in normal group which was 30 : 31 : 3, and the difference between the two groups was statistically significant (P=0.043).
CONCLUSION
The more critical the clinical subtype of patients with COVID-19, the lower the absolute count of each subset of lymphocytes.
COVID-19
;
Humans
;
Killer Cells, Natural
;
Lymphocyte Count
;
Lymphocyte Subsets
;
SARS-CoV-2
;
T-Lymphocyte Subsets
10.Consensus on analysis of peripheral blood lymphocyte subsets by flow cytometry in pediatric clinical application (2019).
Immunity Evaluation Group, China Children′s Immunity and Health Alliance ; Rheumatology and Immunology Committee, Chinese Medical Doctor Association Pediatrician Branch ; Children Allergy Committee, Chinese Medical Doctor Association Pediatrician Branch ; Subspecialty Group of Immunology, the Society of Pediatrics, Chinese Medical Association
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2019;57(6):424-428