Abstract

Bone marrow aspirates from four children with kwashiorkor and three with marasmus were studied using the techniques of electron microscopy and combined Feulgen microspectrophotometry and 3H-thymidine autoradiography. The majority of the erythroblasts were ultrastructurally normal, the distribution of the early polychromatic erythroblasts between the various stages of the cell cycle was normal or almost normal, and the macrophages did not contain ingested erythroblasts. Since erythropoietin production has been shown to be normal in protein-energy malnutrition, these findings suggest that at least in some cases of PEM the impairment of erythropoiesis results primarily from an abnormality in the erythroid progenitor cell pool rather than from dyserythropoiesis and ineffective erythropoiesis. In one afebrile and apparently uninfected patient with marasmus, a substantial proportion of the neutrophil granulocytes and their more mature precursors contained electron-dense, myelin-containing intracytoplasmic structures which were presumed to be abnormal primary granules. In four of the patients, the 3H-thymidine labelling index of the neutrophil promyelocyte-myelocyte pool was increased. In addition, in all of the cases, neutrophils at various stages of degradation were readily found within the cytoplasm of some of the macrophages. Thus, whereas the techniques employed did not reveal a major disturbance in the morphologically recognizable precursor cells of the erythroid series in PEM, they demonstrated some abnormalities in such cells of the neutrophil series.

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