REVERSIBLE NEUTROPHIL DEFECT IN PATIENTS WITH BACTERIAL-ENDOCARDITIS
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 88 (5), 780-787
Abstract
The bactericidal capacities of neutrophilic polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) from 5 untreated adults with bacterial endocarditis (BE), 8 untreated patients with other forms of acute bacterial infection (ABI) and 14 drug-free uninfected normal subjects (NS) were compared with a new technique that uses 5 increasing bacteria-to-neutrophil ratios ranging from 1.25-100 Staphylococcus aureus/neutrophil, PMN from uninfected NS or untreated patients with ABI demonstrated a similar and reproducible ability to kill increasing numbers of S. aureus in 8% normal serum. In contrast, the bactericidal activities of the PMN from untreated patients with BE were significantly depressed and the defect was more apparent at high ratios. Neutrophils from some of these individuals had decreased bactericidal action only at high ratios, indicating a quantitative type of neutrophil defect. There was no morphologic deficiency in the uptake of bacteria by BE neutrophils and comparable rates of glucose [-1-14C] oxidation were found in BE and control neutrophils stimulated with various ratios of heat-killed bacteria. Therefore, the observed abnormality appeared to be that of intracellular killing rather than of ingestion. The proportions of bacteria killed by the PMN of untreated patients with BE improved after antibiotic treatment and became equal to those of NS or untreated ABI patients. This rapid return to normal bactericidal function by the PMN during treatment indicates that the prior deficiency was an acquired consequence of the infectious process of BE.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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