๐ Effects of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus infection on peripheral blood lymphocytes and their subsets
Introduction: Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) caused large outbreaks of atypical pneumonia in 2003, with the largest localized outbreak occurring in Beijing, China. Lymphopenia was prominent amongst the laboratory abnormalities reported in acute SARS. Methods: The effect of SARS on peripheral blood lymphocytes and their subsets was examined in 271 SARS coronavirus-infected individuals. Results: There was a significant decrease in the CD45+, CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD19+ and CD16+/56+ cell counts over the five weeks of the SARS illness although CD4+/CD8+ ratios did not change significantly. The lymphopenia was prolonged, reaching a nadir during days 7-9 in the second week of illness before returning towards normal after five weeks, with the lowest mean CD4+ cell count of 317 cells ร 106/L at day 7, and CD8+ cell count of 239 cells ร 106/L at day 8. Patients with more severe clinical illness, or patients who died, had significantly more profound CD4+ and CD8+ lymphopenia. Discussion: Lymphopenia is a prominent part of SARS-CoV infection and lymphocyte counts may be useful in predicting the severity and clinical outcomes. Possible reasons for the SARS-associated lymphopenia may be direct infection of lymphocytes by SARS-CoV, lymphocyte sequestration in the lung or cytokine-mediated lymphocyte trafficking. There may also be immune-mediated lymphocyte destruction, bone marrow or thymus suppression, or apoptosis. ยฉ 2005 International Society for Infectious Diseases. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
keywords
๐ lymphocyte count (23)
๐ bone marrow (31)
๐ respiratory syndrome (2004)
๐ acute respiratory (1734)
๐ cell count (25)
author
๐ค He, Zhongping
๐ค Zhao, Chunhui
๐ค Dong, Qingming
๐ค Zhuang, Hui
๐ค Song, Shujing
๐ค Peng, Guoai
๐ค Dwyer, Dominic E.
year
โฐ 2005
issn
๐ 12019712
volume
9
number
6
page
323-330
citedbycount
20
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