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American Journal of Pathology, Vol 122, 353-362, Copyright © 1986 by American Society for Investigative Pathology


REGULAR ARTICLES

Surfactant-anti-surfactant immune complexes in infants with respiratory distress syndrome

DS Strayer, TA Merritt, J Lwebuga-Mukasa and M Hallman

The authors sought to determine whether treatment of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) with human surfactant resulted in the formation of detectable circulating immune complexes. Preterm infants with severe RDS were divided into two groups: one group received human surfactant by intratracheal instillation and the other group did not. Both groups received ventilatory management involving intermittent mandatory ventilation. Plasma samples were drawn from these babies prior to treatment and at intervals thereafter. The authors developed an ELISA assay specific for surfactant-anti-surfactant immune complexes and analyzed the plasma samples for such immune complexes. Complement levels were also measured. They found that with time plasma from RDS infants in both groups showed evidence of surfactant-anti-surfactant immune complex formation. The concentrations of immune complexes generally peaked within the first week of life and then appeared to diminish over 1-4 weeks after birth in RDS infants. There was no evidence at any time in either group of immune-complex-mediated injury or of decreased serum complement levels. It is concluded that circulating immune complexes between surfactant and antibodies to surfactant are probably found in most neonates with respiratory distress syndrome, that they do not produce pulmonary damage detectable by clinical and serologic means, and that treatment of neonatal RDS with human surfactant similarly does not produce lung injury as determined with these techniques.


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Copyright © 1986 by the American Society for Investigative Pathology.