Abstract

The percentage of peripheral blood lymphocytes forming rosettes with sheep erythrocytes (E-rosettes) was determined at admission to the INCAP Clinical Center in eight acutely malnourished Guatemalan children, and again after 14 and 28-30 days of nutritional therapy. While the mean percentage of E-rosettes increased during therapy, the change (from 35.6 +/- 10% to 43.3 +/- 19%) did not reach statistical significance because of the variable response of different subjects. At each time period, however, in vitro incubation with the thymic factor, thymosin fraction 5, significantly increased the percentage of E-rosetting lymphocytes. The presence of thymosin responsive cells in circulation after 1 month of optimal nutritional support indicates that immature T-lymphocytes can persist in circulation in patients with severe malnutrition, even after clinical improvement. Thus, neither the percentage of E-rosettes in peripheral blood nor their response to in vitro incubation with thymosin correlated with anthropometric measures of nutritional status in individual patients. This suggests that other nutritional or nonnutritional factors may be important modulating influences on T-lymphocytes, and that prospective studies with thymic factor administration are warranted.

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