Abstract
Sixteen patients, 8 to 30 yr of age, with acute (toxemic) phase schistosomiasis mansoni were studied immunologically within 2 to 3 mo of their exposure to Schistosoma mansoni cercariae, and were monitored after chemotherapy. Total leukocyte levels and peripheral blood eosinophilias were higher in these patients than in similar individuals with chronic schistosomiasis mansoni. In contrast to chronic patients, the eosinophilias of the acute cases were decreased rather than elevated upon treatment. Total lymphocyte population (T and B cell) percentages were not altered during acute infection. Lymphoid subset (T3+, T4+, and T8+) analysis revealed elevated levels of both T4+ and T8+ cells. In vitro blastogenic responses of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMN) to heterogeneous schistosome-derived antigens (eggs, SEA; adult worms, AW; and cercariae, CERC) were evaluated. SEA responsiveness was considerably higher than that of patients with chronic S. mansoni infections. The ratios of SEA to AW responses in acute cases gave a mean of 2.0, as opposed to 0.5 for a comparable group of chronically infected patients. The sera of most acute patients already contained suppressive factors that specifically decreased schistosomal antigen-induced PBMN blastogenesis. Chemotherapy of acute cases lead to a diminution of PBMN responsiveness to SEA and CERC. Treatment of patients with chronic infections lead to the elevation of such responses. PBMN from patients with acute infections produced lymphokine leukocyte inhibition factor upon exposure of the cells to SEA but not AW. A similar pattern was true for production of the lymphokine activity mitogenic factor. Levels of antibody in sera of acutely infected patients against SEA, CERC, and AW were considerably higher than levels in sera of chronically infected patients matched for age and intensity of their infections. These high antibody titers persisted for at least 6 mo after treatment, and were unrelated to the intensity of infection. The immunologic status of these patients with acute schistosomiasis mansoni differed considerably from patients with chronic infections. These findings re-emphasize the immunoregulatory events that apparently develop upon continued exposure to schistosomes and their products during chronic infection.
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