J Antimicrob Chemother
April 1986
A high prevalence of iron deficiency was found in apparently healthy Asian immigrant children in Harrow. After excluding children with overtly abnormal red cell indices, Asian and European children had identical haemoglobin values, but Asian children had much lower mean cell volume and mean corpuscular haemoglobin values and higher red blood cell values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA 34-month-old boy with intermittent diarrhoea and abdominal distension from 2 months of age, a chronic microabscess of the cheek, gastric antral narrowing, and perianal abscesses containing granulomata was found at colonscopy to have extensive, noncaseating, submucosal ileal and colonic granulomata. He was initially thought to have Crohn's disease, but then developed a cervical abscess, and a diagnosis of chronic granulomatous disease was established. This is an important, although rare, differential diagnosis of chronic inflammatory bowel disease in childhood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA normal range for IgG1, IgG2, and IgG3 subclasses has been established for children aged 6 months to 5 years using commercially available monoclonal antisera. Of particular interest were the very low concentrations of IgG2 in some healthy children, a finding which casts doubt on the importance of IgG2 deficiency reported in some patients with otherwise unexplained infections. It was not possible to construct a normal range for IgG4 values probably because these segregate into two populations in normal subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCryptosporidial oocysts were identified by modified Ziehl-Neelsen stain in the stools of seven (3.2%) of 213 children with acute or chronic diarrhoea and one (0.9%) of 112 controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Exp Immunol
November 1984
Thirty pre-school children with recurrent respiratory infections had a higher age adjusted mean serum IgG level than their siblings or a reference group. One index child had persistently low serum IgA, but mean serum IgA and IgM levels for the index children were normal. All of the 23 index children and 17 siblings studied had a four-fold or greater rise in virus neutralizing antibody titre.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mean, age adjusted, serum IgA values of 47 children with febrile convulsions were almost identical to those of controls. Five children had serum IgA values less than 0.1 g/l by nephelometry, suggesting that in some cases at least there may be an association between a low serum IgA concentration and febrile convulsions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe content of 3 antigens--filamentous haemagglutinin, lymphocytosis-promoting factor, and serotype-specific agglutinogens (fimbriae)--was determined in the current UK whole-cell whooping cough vaccine. Antibodies to these antigens and to outer membrane proteins and lipopolysaccharide of Bordetella pertussis were measured in the serum of unvaccinated children and children who had received 1, 2, or 3 doses of the vaccine. Children who had received one dose of vaccine had varied low antibody titres.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSerum immunoglobulin concentrations were determined on sera from 298 healthy children aged six months to six years using the Hyland laser nephelometer PDQ system. Age-specific 95% reference ranges for serum IgG, IgA and IgM are presented; considerable care has been taken to ensure statistical validity of the reference ranges. The wide range of values in children under two years suggest that measuring immunoglobulin concentrations in this age group is of little value in diagnosing immunodeficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman coronaviruses were found by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay in upper respiratory tract secretions taken during 30% of 108 acute respiratory infections experienced by 30 children under age 6 years with recurrent respiratory infections (index group), and during 29% of 51 acute infections experienced by their siblings. Lower respiratory tract infection--predominantly wheezy bronchitis--occurred in 30% of the index children's coronavirus positive infections but in none of their siblings' infections. Reinfections were common.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed for diagnosing human coronavirus (HCV) infections in children. One hundred and seventy seven nose swabs, throat swabs, and nasopharyngeal aspirates were collected from 30 children suffering from acute respiratory infections. These samples were tested for HCV antigens by ELISA and 28.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo infants with recurrent infections and a history of delay in separation of the umbilical cord (1 month and 17 days) had severely impaired neutrophil mobility. In addition very poor natural killer cell (NK) activity of blood lymphocytes against a leukaemia cell line (Molt 4F) was found. Incubation of lymphocytes with lymphoblastoid interferon increased NK activity in the one case tested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty preschool children presenting with recurrent respiratory infections and their unaffected siblings were observed prospectively for a year. The index children experienced more episodes of acute respiratory infection than their siblings. Respiratory viruses were the major cause of respiratory infections.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA girl had repeated episodes of widespread osteolysis, subcutaneous fat necrosis, and periarticular fat necrosis mimicking arthritis. Her symptoms persisted for 4 years, after in initial episode of severe abdominal pain, and were accompanied by only minor abdominal symptoms. She was found to have a developmental pancreatic cyst (which was excised).
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