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Lymphocytes from chronically inflamed human gingiva

34

Citations

26

References

1983

Year

Abstract

Recovery and identification in vitro of lymphocytes from gingival tissue was carried out for 20 patients with chronic marginal gingivitis. A combination of 90 min incubation in a collagenase‐containing medium followed by mechanical disruption through a stainless‐steel grid resulted in a mean yield of 2.42 × 10 5 (S. D. ± 1.26 × 10 5 : n = 16) lymphocytes per 100 mg or tissue. When Ficoll density centrifugation was introduced into the recovery procedure, the mean lymphocyte yield dropped to 2. 15 × 10 4 (S. D. ± 0.99 × 10 4 : n = 4) per 100 mg. Mean viability of recovered lymphocytes was 78% (S. D. ± 5%: n =16) and for Ficoll separation, 77% (S. D. ± 1%: n = 4). In cell suspensions obtained from 12 or the patients, T lymphocytes were identified by rosette formation with sheep erythrocytes, and B cells were quantitated using fluorescent identification of membrane immunoglobulin. Macrophages were identified on the basis of non‐specific esterase characteristics. Tire predominant lymphocytes round were T cells, with a mean proportion of 53.9% (S. D. ± 5.6%); the mean proportion of B cells was 32.7% (S. D. ± 5.4%). Macrophages accounted for a mean of 7.7% (S. D. ± 2.8%) or the recovered lymphoid cells. The lymphocyte‐plasma cell ratio in recovered cell suspensions was 7:1 compared with a ratio of 1.7:1 noted in histological sections.

References

YearCitations

1963

7.1K

1971

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1968

510

1977

400

1977

253

1970

235

1979

198

1972

164

1975

144

1980

120

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