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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, 11 1995, 763-765, Vol 2, No. 6
CA Martins, MG Fonteles, LJ Barrett and RL Guerrant
We have reported that lactoferrin, a 77-kDa iron-binding glycoprotein found
in secondary neutrophil granules, provides a useful marker of fecal
leukocytes in fecal specimens from patients with inflammatory diarrhea (R.
L. Guerrant, V. Araujo, E. Soares, K. Kotloff, A. A. M. Lima, W. H. Cooper,
and A. G. Lee, J. Clin. Microbiol. 30:1238-1242, 1992). In order to
determine the usefulness of this marker of neutrophilic inflammation in
different body fluids, we examined blood, gingival swabs, sputum, and
saliva using antilactoferrin antibodies (lactoferrin latex agglutination
[LFLA]). LFLA titers in whole blood samples were < or = 1:4 in all eight
samples from patients with neutropenia (absolute neutrophil count [ANC] =
< 150 polymorphonuclear cells [PMNs] per microliter), < or = 1:8 in
samples from 13 individuals with moderate leukocyte counts (ANC = 150 to
8,000), and 1:8 to 1:32 in samples from six patients with neutrophilia (ANC
> 8,000). While the overlap precludes a useful role in the
identification of neutropenia, these data confirm that lactoferrin titers
of > 1:100 indeed indicate inflammation in fluid specimens. On
quantitative elution of lactoferrin from gingival swabs, all 7 patients
with dental plaque had titers of 1:200 to 1:400; 9 of 12 patients with
clinical gingivitis had LFLA titers of 1:200 to 1:1,600, while all 7
individuals with healthy gums and teeth and 4 edentulous patients had LFLA
titers of < or = 1:100. Eight purulent sputum samples had titers of >
or = 1:400 (7 were 1:1,600) while 11 normal saliva samples showed titers of
< or = 1:100. Lactoferrin titers in sputum, gingival swabs, and whole
blood correlate with the presence of neutrophils or inflammation in these
specimens and may offer a convenient rapid test for inflammatory processes.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Correlation of lactoferrin with neutrophilic inflammation in body fluids
Department of Medicine, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, 22908, USA.
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