PMID: 6110341Feb 1, 1981Paper

The pathogenesis of experimentally induced Trypanosoma brucei infection in the dog. II. Change in the lymphoid organs

The American Journal of Pathology
W I MorrisonJ M Preston

Abstract

Marked changes were found in the spleen and lymph nodes of dogs experimentally infected with Trypanosoma brucei. These changes were considered to occur in two phases. First, in animals examined on Days 8 and 16 after inoculation, there was an intense proliferative response; this involved particularly the B-dependent follicular areas and was accompanied by a dramatic increase in the number of plasma cells in the splenic red pulp and medullary cords of the lymph nodes. Although numerous large proliferating lymphoblasts were found in the periarteriolar regions of the spleen and in the peripheral part of the paracortical areas of the lymph nodes, the presence of cells containing Ig in these regions made it difficult to evaluate the degree of involvement of thymus-derived cells. The plasma cell response involved both IgM and IgG, although the increase in IgM-containing cells was most striking. During this initial phase there was focal hemorrhage, deposition of fibrin, necrosis, and infiltration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in the spleen, these changes being most severe in the peripheral follicular areas. Following the initial proliferative phase and prior to the death of the host during the fourth week of the infection, the splee...Continue Reading

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