Articles

CELLULAR COMPOSITION OF LYMPH IN EXPERIMENTAL LYMPHEDEMA

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Abstract

Lymph cell populations were characterized immunologically in dogs with chronic postsurgical lymphedema. There was a 10- to 30-fold increase in lymph total cell count as compared with normal (control) dogs. Morphologically, these were predominantly small lymphocytes with approximately 4-6% monocytes and veiled cells. In contrast, lymph from normal dogs contained 33% granulocytes and 27% monocytes. The Fc-R+ and C3b-R+ mononuclear nonadherent cells were less represented in lymph in chronic stasis than in normals. A high autotransformation rate of lymph cells and marked responsiveness to PHA and Con A were also observed. In chronic lymphedema K-cell and NK-cell cytotoxicity were lower than in normal lymph. Interruption or retardation of the lymphocyte recirculation pathway with lymph stasis may alter regulation of immune responsiveness in lymphedematous tissue.

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How to Cite: Galkowska, H. & Olszewski, W. (1986) “CELLULAR COMPOSITION OF LYMPH IN EXPERIMENTAL LYMPHEDEMA”, Lymphology. 19(4).