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  • Article
    Garewal G, Sehgal S, Aikat BK, Gupta AN.
    Br J Obstet Gynaecol. 1978 Mar;85(3):221-4.
    The percentage of T-cells was studied in pregnant patients with a previous history of spontaneous abortions, in patients without such a history and in nonpregnant controls. The percentage of T-cells remained unaltered during the three trimesters of normal pregnancy. In patients with a previous history of spontaneous abortions, the T-cell percentages were lower in the second and third trimesters than in non-pregnant controls, but the values did not differ statistically from corresponding values in those patients with no previous history of spontaneous abortion (normal pregnancy). The phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)-induced transformation of lymphocytes was depressed in the second and third trimesters of both patients with a normal pregnancy and those with a previous history of spontaneous abortions. Thus, while the percentage of T-cells remained unaltered during pregnancy, their response to PHA falls in the second and third trimesters.
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