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Studies on esinophils in bone-marrow tissue culture of the human sternum Part 2. Study on the causative factor of eosinophilia in hookworm disease by means of bone-marrow tissue culture with a special reference to the relationship with allergic reaction

Abstract

From these results it is but natural to assume that the antigen-antibody reaction is involved in the phenomenon, eosinophilia. The antigen in this instance is the filtrate of hookworm emulsion, and the serum of hookworm disease as well as the bone marrow can be thought to contain the antibody. In any case, so long as the medium contains the serum or bone marrow or both of them obtained from the patient of hookworm disease, eosinophilia and the acceleration in the motility of eosinophils are brought about in the growth zone by addition of the filtrate of hookworm emulsion. Therfore, as for the mechanism inducing hookworm eosinophilia, it may by interpreted that the patient of hookworm disese is repeatedly sensitized by the antigen arising all probability from the metabolic products of hookworms or from the dead bodies of the worms; and producing the antibody in tissues and blood, thus the antigen-antibody reaction is elicited in vivo as long as hookworms live in the human body so that the increase in the mitosis and the acceration in the motility of eosinophils in the bone marrow are brought about with the resultant continuous discharge of a large quantity of eosinophils from the bone marrow parenchma into the sinusoids, there by inducing eosinophilia in the peripheral blood.</p

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