The New England journal of medicine
-
Mononuclear peripheral blood leukocytes from 21 patients with infectious mononucleosis and 16 healthy controls were tested in a 51Cr-release assay for cytotoxicity against two human lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from the same donor. One line contained the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV); the other did not. Acute-phase leukocytes were significantly more cytotoxic against the EBV-infected cell line than were control leukocytes. ⋯ Cells of three patients with acute mononucleosis-like illnesses failed to show killing activity above those of normal controls. Cytotoxicity against the EBV-negative line was not significantly different for each group. The finding of cytotoxic cells in infectious-mononucleosis patients with atypical lymphocytes suggests that these cells operate in vivo to limit the proliferation of altered EBV-transformed B lymphoblasts.
-
To study metabolic changes in the central nervous system after profound anoxia, we measured changes in cisternal and lumbar cerebrospinal fluid. Acid-base values and electrolyte concentrations were determined in cisternal and lumbar fluid from 12 severely anoxic patients (cardiac arrest), and from 15 within 24 hours after cardiac resuscitation. ⋯ These findings indicate that during anoxia potassium and hydrogen ion flow from brain cells into the brain extracellular fluid, and that acute changes are reflected more accurately by cisternal than by lumbar fluid. In resuscitated patients cisternal fluid was normal, and normal cisternal-lumbar differences were found; thus, the normal milieu of brain cells is rapidly reestablished after resuscitation.