Abstract
A case is descr. A hemolytic streptococcus isolated from patient''s urine renders red cells panagglutinable. The T agglutinogen that arises at the surface of normal red cells treated with filtrate of this streptococcus is identical with one resulting from treatment with cholera filtrate. Rh-positive red cells treated with the bacterial filtrate are agglutinated by serum containing incomplete Rh antibodies (anti-D). The polyagglutinability of red cells in vivo and the Hubener-Thomsen-Friedenreich phenomenon were considered closely related and probably identical.

This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit: