Abstract

Changes occurring in the blood and the peritoneal cavity following the intraperitoneal injection of platelet-activating factor (PAF-acether) into rats were compared with those when antigen was injected intraperitoneally into actively sensitised rats. A blood eosinophilia had been produced in the rats by an intravenous injection of Sephadex G200 6 days before either challenge. 5 min after PAF-acether, the total number of cells in the peritoneal washings had decreased and the concentration of extravasated dye-labelled plasma protein had increased with no change in histamine levels. On the other hand, antigen at this time produced nor only a decrease in cells and an increase in dye but also an increase in histamine concentration. Only antigen produced a cellular infiltration into the peritoneal cavity with an increase in numbers of neutrophils in the peritoneal washings at 4 h and of mononuclear cells and eosinophils at 24 h. In the blood at 4 h after either challenge, there was a neutrophilia and an eosinopenia. When PAF-acether and antigen were injected together into actively sensitised rats, leucocyte counts in the peritoneal washings increased by a similar amount, both at 4 and 24 h, as those in rats given antigen alone.

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