학술논문

Yeast opsonization in newborn infants and its relationship to parental atopy.
Document Type
Article
Source
Clinical & Experimental Immunology. May1982, Vol. 48 Issue 2, p411-416. 6p.
Subject
*NEONATOLOGY
*NEWBORN infants
*IMMUNODEFICIENCY
*IMMUNITY
*YEAST
*SERUM
Language
ISSN
0009-9104
Abstract
Sera from 30 of 303 (99"/) unselected term newborn infants were deficient in their ability to opsonize heat-killed baker's yeasts, an incidence which is almost double that seen in adults. Genetic influence is important in some since the mothers of 10 infants with defective opsonisation showed the same defect, but it was not related to the sex or race of the infant or to the atopic state of the parents. In others the defect could be due to a functional maturation delay of the complement system, but not to inhibitory factors in neonatal serum since correction of opsonisation was achieved with subopsonizing amounts of normal sera. Significantly more infants had sera with high opsonizing capacity ( > 80% yeasts phagocytosed) when compared with adults; perhaps antibody independent immune mechanisms like this are important in the newborn. This study shows that a common specific immunodeficiency which may predispose to severe infection or atopy can be identified at birth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]