Publication | Closed Access
The Role of Blood from HLA-Homozygous Donors in Fatal Transfusion-Associated Graft-versus-Host Disease after Open-Heart Surgery
239
Citations
7
References
1989
Year
ImmunologyPathologyImmunotherapyBone Marrow FailureBlood TransfusionHematologyBone MarrowGraft SurvivalCardiologyTransplantation SurgeryGraft-versus-host DiseaseTransplantationAutoimmune DiseaseTransfusion MedicineAutoimmunityAcute Graft-versus-host DiseaseBlood TransplantationHla-homozygous DonorsBlood DonationTransplant RejectionOpen-heart SurgeryMedicineGraft RejectionTransfusion-associated Graft-versus-host Disease
Acute graft-versus-host disease has been described in immunocompromised patients receiving nonirradiated blood products.1 2 3 In addition to the involvement of the skin, liver, and gut typically seen in graft-versus-host disease after bone marrow transplantation,4 these patients have bone marrow involvement that results in pancytopenia. The aplasia observed in graft-versus-host disease is presumably due to recognition by the donor's immune-reactive cells of histoincompatible antigens on the host's hematopoietic precursor cells. Transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease carries a high mortality rate; most patients succumb to infection.2 Because the onset of transfusion-associated graft-versus-host disease is delayed and because its symptoms are similar to those seen in . . .
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1