The Effects of Acupuncture on White Cell Counts

1974 ◽  
Vol 02 (04) ◽  
pp. 383-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marjorie L. Brown ◽  
George A. Ulett ◽  
John A. Stern

The anticipation of acupuncture, simple insertion of needles or the electrical stimulation of needles at both classical acupuncture points and "false" points, all produce an increase in white blood cell count. Electrostimulation produced the greatest, expectation of needle insertion the least, increase in white cell count. Though needles remain to place, the white cell count returns to basal level within one hour. Preliminary data on peripheral skin temperature as affected by stimulation of acupuncture points and non-points, suggests a higher temperature on the side of stimulation. For acupuncture site stimulation, the temperature differential appears to be more persistent than is true when non-sites are stimulated. Subjects reported needle insertion at acupuncture points as less painful than at non-points. Feelings of numbness were produced by stimulation of both classical and false acupuncture points.

1981 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 108-112
Author(s):  
Frank A. Oski

Neutropenia, a decrease in the number of circulating neutrophilic leukocytes, often provides a diagnostic challenge to the pediatrician. When the pediatrician is unable to ascertain the cause of the neutropenia, pediatric hematologists are also frequently frustrated in their attempts to uncover a satisfactory explanation for the finding. The total white cell count and the absolute granulocyte count vary as a function of age as depicted in Table 1. The while blood cell count and the absolute granulocyte count are characteristically increased in the normal newborn and both rapidly decrease during the first week of life. After the first year of life, the normal neutrophil count generally ranges between 1,500 to 8,000/cu mm. Although neutropenia is conventionally defined as the presence of an absolute granulocyte count (neutrophilic leukocytes and band forms) of less than 1,500 cu mm, an increase in the incidence of infections is rarely observed until the absolute granulocyte count remains persistently below 1,000/cu mm. The black population and possibly Yemenite Jews characteristically have lower total white cell counts than age-matched control subjects. Approximately 30% to 40% of black male adults have a total white blood cell count of less than 5,000/cu mm as compared with only 7% of white males.2 Presumably the same difference in distribution of white cell counts exists in the pediatric population as well.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 58-62
Author(s):  
Ram Sagar Shah ◽  
Kaushal Sigdel

Background: To determine the relationship between expulsion rate of distal ureteric calculus less than orequal to 10mm in size and C reactive protein (CRP) level, white cell count and neutrophil percentage. Materials and Methods: A total of 186 patients with distal ureteric calculus of ≤10mm were evaluated for stone expulsion rate and its correlation with serum CRP, white cell count and neutrophil percentage. All patients received tablet Tamsulosin 0.4mg for 4 weeks or till the expulsion of stone. Patients were called weekly till 4 weeks, or early if there was history of stone expulsion. Patients were divided in two groups according to normal and elevated CRP levels, white cell count and neutrophil percent age at baseline for statistical analysis. Results: The patients had an average age of 35.6 } 13.9 years. 52.2% were male. Ratio of right to left was1.58:1. Majority of the patients with distal ureteric calculus ≤ 10mm passed their stone (74.7 %) with medical expulsion therapy. Expulsion of stone less than 5mm was statistically significant (p0.017). Patients with normal neutrophil percentage and normal CRP level had higher stone expulsion rate than elevated neutrophil or CRP (85.2% vs. 40.9, 91.8% vs. 30.8% respectively).In patients with normal white cell count, 86.4% passed their stone while in elevated white cellcount group 39.1% passed their stone. Conclusion: This study showed patients with distal ureteric calculus of ≤10mmwith normal CRP level and normal neutrophil count had higher expulsion rate while WBC count showed no statistically significant association.


1987 ◽  
Vol 113 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. T. A. Fitzpatrick ◽  
B. D. Greenstein

ABSTRACT The effects of several steroids on the regenerating thymus in ageing male rats have been studied. Rats aged from 12 to 15 months were orchidectomized and 7 days later implanted s.c. with silicone elastomer tubing containing 25 mg testosterone, 5α-dihydrotestosterone (DHT), oestradiol, progesterone or corticosterone. One group of rats received an empty implant. Thirty days later the rats were killed and the thymus, spleen, ventral prostate and seminal vesicles weighed and retained for histology. Whole blood was taken for total and differential white cell counts; plasma was prepared for radioimmunoassay of testosterone, oestradiol, progesterone and corticosterone. After orchidectomy only, a multilobular thymus was present, and histologically the tissue appeared healthy. In testosterone- and oestradiol-treated rats, thymus weight was reduced to about 50% of that in untreated animals. Histologically, much of the thymus taken at autopsy was fat and what remained was poorly organized and contained a much lower density of thymocytes. The total white cell count was significantly reduced in these animals, the effect appearing to be predominantly on lymphocytes. Although treatment with DHT also resulted in a lower mean thymus weight than that of orchidectomized animals, histologically the tissue appeared similar to that of the untreated castrated animals. In rats treated with DHT, the total white cell count was significantly higher than in testosterone-implanted rats. Both progesterone and corticosterone implants resulted in significantly smaller mean thymus weights, although these steroids were not as potent as testosterone or oestradiol. Corticosterone, but not progesterone, appeared to cause a significant reduction in circulating lymphocytes. Dihydrotestosterone possessed only half the potency of testosterone in restoring the weights of the accessory sex organs. Serum concentrations of testosterone in orchidectomized old rats were 0·33 ± 0·02 nmol/l and in testosterone-implanted rats 4·8 ± 0·4 nmol/l. These results raise the possibility that testosterone and oestradiol may have caused atrophy of the thymus, while DHT may have retarded regeneration of the thymus without any atrophic effect. It remains to be seen whether the different responses between testosterone and DHT, in both the thymus and accessory sex organs, are due to differences in intrinsic action or differences in the metabolism of the steroids. J. Endocr. (1987) 113, 51–55


Blood ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 98 (5) ◽  
pp. 1298-1301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alun V. Evans ◽  
Blair P. Wood ◽  
Julia J. Scarisbrick ◽  
Elizabeth A. Fraser-Andrews ◽  
Sue Chinn ◽  
...  

Data were analyzed from 23 patients with Sézary syndrome (defined by erythroderma, more than 10% circulating atypical mononuclear cells, and peripheral blood T-cell clone) undergoing monthly extracorporeal photopheresis as the sole therapy for up to 1 year. The cohort showed a significant reduction of skin scores during treatment (P = .001). Thirteen patients (57%) achieved a reduction in skin score greater than 25% from baseline at 3, 6, 9, or 12 months (responders). Reduction in skin score correlated with reduction in the Sézary cell count as a percentage of total white cell count (P = .03). Responders and nonresponders were compared. None of the measured parameters was significantly different between the 2 groups. It was assessed whether any of the baseline parameters predicted outcome. A higher baseline lymphocyte count was significantly associated with a decrease in skin score at 6 months (P < .05). A higher baseline Sézary cell count as a percentage of total white cell count predicted a subject was more likely to be a responder after 6 months of treatment (P = .021). No other parameters predicted responder status. These data show that the modest falls in CD4, CD8, and Sézary cell counts were seen in all patients and might have resulted from lymphocyte apoptosis. This mechanism could explain the more favorable response seen in patients with higher percentages of Sézary cells in the peripheral blood. Alternatively, minimum tumor burden might be required for the induction of a cytotoxic response. Analysis of tumor-specific cytotoxic T cells is needed to investigate these possibilities further.


Blood ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 1230-1234 ◽  
Author(s):  
JM Rowe ◽  
MA Lichtman

Abstract Ten patients under 20 yr of age with the usual (adult) type of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) were seen at the University of Rochester Medical Center from 1970 to 1982. The mean white cell count in these 10 patients at presentation was 360,000/microliter, as compared to a mean of 137,000/microliter in 80 CML patients over 20 yr of age seen during the same time interval (p less than 0.02). Analyses of all 90 cases revealed a significant decrease in the average leukocyte count at presentation with increasing age. The childhood cases also had a significantly higher proportion of blood blasts, promyelocytes, and myelocytes than did the adult subjects (p less than 0.01). Signs of leukostasis were present in 12% of adult cases as compared to 60% of the 10 childhood cases, and in these 6 subjects, the mean white cell count was 510,000/microliter. In these 6 patients, leukapheresis and/or chemical therapy was initiated rapidly, and this was followed by complete resolution of the clinical signs of leukostasis. A review of the literature from 1960 to 1982 identified 61 childhood cases that were reported with the usual type of CML. In this group, the frequency of hyperleukocytosis and the distribution of white cell counts corresponded very closely to the 10 cases studied at the University of Rochester. Thus, the usual type of CML presenting in childhood differs from that of adults in that hyperleukocytosis, blood granulocyte immaturity, and leukostatic central nervous system, retinal, and respiratory signs are significantly more common and extreme and merit rapid cytoreductive treatment.


1993 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 73-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kweider ◽  
G.D.O. Lowe ◽  
G.D. Murray ◽  
D.F. Kinane ◽  
D.A. McGowan

Plasma fibrinogen and white blood cell count were compared in fifty patients aged 25–50 years with periodontal disease and in fifty age-matched controls with relatively healthy periodontal tissues. Patients had significantly higher levels of fibrinogen and white cell count, and dental indices correlated significantly with these two cardiovascular risk factors on multivariate analyses. We suggest that inflammatory dental disease may be a determinant of fibrinogen level and white cell count in the general population, and that fibrinogen and white cell count may be two mediators of the link between dental disease and myocardial infarction.


1980 ◽  
Vol 1 (5) ◽  
pp. 59-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Williams ◽  
Dominic Pantalony ◽  
Stephen I. Vas ◽  
Ramesh Khanna ◽  
Dimitrios G. Oreopoulos

Dialysate white-cell count and differential was performed by a Cytospin technique in 38 control CAPD patients and serially in 24 patients with bacterial peritonitis and one patient with “peritoneal fluid eosinophilia”. Dialysate solutions of control patients have cell counts below 501 mm3, comprised mainly of mononuclear cells; these presumably repre


1996 ◽  
Vol 86 (5) ◽  
pp. 224-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
DG Armstrong ◽  
TA Perales ◽  
RT Murff ◽  
GW Edelson ◽  
JG Welchon

The authors reviewed the admission leukocyte indices of 338 consecutive admissions (203 males, 135 females, mean age of 60.2 +/- 12.9 years) with a primary diagnosis of diabetic foot infection in a multicenter retrospective study. The mean white blood cell count on admission for all subjects studied was calculated at 11.9 +/- 5.4 x 103 cells/mm3. Of all white blood cell counts secured for patients admitted with a diabetic foot infection, 56% (189 out of 338) were within normal limits. The average automated polymorphonuclear leukocyte percentage was calculated at 71.4 +/- 11.1% (normal range 40% to 80%). Normal polymorphonuclear leukocyte values were present in 83.7% of subjects. The authors stress that the diagnosis of a diabetic pedal infection is made primarily on the basis of clinical signs and symptoms, and that a normal white cell count and white cell differential should not deter the physician from taking appropriate action to mitigate the propagation of a potentially limb-threatening pedal infection.


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