• 1 March 1973
    • journal article
    • Vol. 24  (3) , 467-75
Abstract
The role played by immune lymph node cells in expulsion of normal, damaged and adapted adult worms (Ogilvie and Hockley, 1968) from the small intestine of the rat was studied. Sensitized mesenteric lymph node cells caused the rapid and complete expulsion of worms which had previously been damaged by the action of antibodies. Over the same time, about 50 per cent of normal worms were expelled from cell recipients, and there was a ten-fold reduction in egg production by these worms. Adapted worms were markedly less susceptible than normal worms to the immunological attack mounted by the transferred cells.