Levin S, Schlesinger M, Handzel Z, Hahn T, Altman Y, Czernobilsky B, Boss J
Pediatrics. 1979 Jan;63(1):80-7.
Children with Down's syndrome (DS) often have small and abnormal thymuses, with lymphocyte depletion, diminution of the cortex, and loss of corticomedullary demarcation--a picture resembling thymic involution. Besides this, they have markedly enlarged Hassall's corpuscles, some surrounded by a sheath of lymphocytes. Patients with DS are known to have increased numbers of respiratory infections; they also have a higher incidence of lymphatic leukemia than do individuals who do not have DS. Studies of cell-mediated (thymic-dependent) immunity demonstrate that children with DS have both diminished numbers of T cells as well as functional deficiency of these cells.
唐氏综合征(DS)患儿的胸腺往往小且异常,存在淋巴细胞耗竭、皮质变薄以及皮质髓质分界消失的情况——这一表现类似于胸腺退化。除此之外,他们的哈氏小体明显增大,有些被一层淋巴细胞包绕。已知DS患者的呼吸道感染次数增多;他们患淋巴白血病的几率也高于非DS个体。对细胞介导(胸腺依赖性)免疫的研究表明,DS患儿的T细胞数量减少且这些细胞存在功能缺陷。