THE IMPORTANCE OF EOSINOPHIL CELLS IN KIDNEY ALLOGRAFT REJECTION
- 1 March 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Transplantation
- Vol. 45 (3) , 537-539
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00007890-198803000-00007
Abstract
The composition of the intragraft cellular infiltrate was studied in 83 renal allograft recipients with the technique of fine-needle aspiration cytology in the first four weeks following kidney transplantation. We found a significantly (P < 0.05) higher mean tissue eosinophil percentage in patients who had irreversible rejections with transplant loss than in those who had reversible rejections (12.54 .+-. 2.31 versus 3.79 .+-. 1.14, mean .+-. SEM). Patients who had serious, dialysis-requiring rejections also showed a significantly (P < 0.05) higher mean tissue eosinophil percentage than those who had reversible rejections (21.40 .+-. 5.98 versus 3.79 .+-. 1.14, mean .+-. SEM). The frequency of the HLA B8 antigen was 46.2% in patients who had excessive tissue eosinophilia, whereas its frequency in all the studied patients was 18.3%. Based on our observations, the presence of more than 4% eosinophils in the tissue inflammatory exudate is a specific (91%) and fairly sensitive (78%) indicator of irreversible and severe acute rejections.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE PROGNOSTIC VALUE OF THE EOSINOPHIL IN ACUTE RENAL ALLOGRAFT REJECTIONTransplantation, 1986
- BLOOD EOSINOPHILIA, STEROIDS, AND REJECTIONTransplantation, 1985
- Kidney transplant biopsies in the diagnosis and management of acute rejection reactionsKidney International, 1976
- T AND B CELL PATTERNS IN IRREVERSIBLY REJECTED HUMAN RENAL-ALLOGRAFTS - CORRELATION OF MORPHOLOGY WITH SURFACE MARKERS AND CYTOTOXIC CAPACITY OF ISOLATED LYMPHOID INFILTRATES1976