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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, 01 1995, 57-61, Vol 2, No. 1
L Belec, D Meillet, M Levy, A Georges, C Tevi-Benissan and J Pillot
Local immunological defense mechanisms in the cervicovaginal mucosa
currently remain incompletely defined, especially from a quantitative point
of view. Addition of an inert substance, lithium chloride (LiCl), into the
washing buffer used to carry out the vaginal washing for collecting
cervicovaginal secretions and measurement of its concentration with a flame
absorption spectrophotometer, before and after the specimen is sampled,
permits the quantification of the volume of cervicovaginal secretions
collected and the approximation of the dilution factor of a soluble
component introduced by the washing. Lithium, at a concentration of 10 mM,
gives the best precision of measurement and has no effect on the results of
the immunoassays. In a population of 27 nonpregnant women (age range, 18 to
45 years), the volume of cervicovaginal secretions collected by vaginal
washing with 3 ml of LiCl-phosphate-buffered saline was 12% +/- 3.2% (mean
+/- standard deviation) of the total volume and showed large
interindividual variations (range, 5.6 to 18.8%); the mean dilution factor
of a soluble component from the vaginal secretions was 9.9% +/- 2.8%
(range, 6.3 to 18.8%). According to the date of the menstrual cycle, the
mean volume of collected cervicovaginal secretions was significantly
increased in the luteal phase in comparison with the follicular phase;
conversely, the mean dilution factor of a soluble component was more
important in the follicular than in the luteal phase. These features
strengthen the need to quantify accurately the dilution factor introduced
by vaginal washing when studying cervicovaginal immunity.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Dilution assessment of cervicovaginal secretions obtained by vaginal washing for immunological assays
Unite d'Immunologie Microbienne, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France.
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