[Dynamics of immunological indices in patients with chronic viral hepatitis B and the effect of thymalin therapy].
Gol'zand. I V IV; Murav'eva. N N NN; Goriacheva. L G LG
Key Findings
- Thymalin increased total T‑lymphocyte counts and restored the T‑suppressor/T‑helper ratio in most patients.
- Clinical and biochemical remission occurred in roughly 71.6% of the treated children.
- Sensitivity to hepatitis B surface antigen dropped from 30.5% to 13.9%, while sensitivity to liver lipoprotein stayed high.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, thymalin appears to have modest immune‑boosting effects in the context of chronic viral hepatitis, but the data are limited to sick children and not directly transferable to healthy adults. It may be of interest for those exploring immune modulation, yet no clear dosing protocol or safety profile for general use is provided.
Summary
In a study of 102 kids with chronic hepatitis B, giving the peptide thymalin helped their immune system recover: more T‑cells, a better balance between helper and suppressor T‑cells, and fewer cells reacting to the virus. About 72% of the children showed clinical improvement after treatment.
Abstract
The work deals with the results of the study of T-lymphocytes and their subpopulations (active, thermostable, theophylline-sensitive and theophylline-resistant) in 102 children with chronic viral hepatitis B, depending on the effectiveness of thymalin therapy. The sensitization of lymphocytes to specific antigens was studied. Among patients with chronic viral hepatitis B and cirrhosis of the liver the homozygous phenotype of haptoglobin is registered essentially more frequently (63.6% and 82.4% respectively) than among healthy persons (44.0%). The patients of this group showed a decrease in the number of T-lymphocytes, disturbances in the suppressor/helper ratio: hypersuppression in persisting hepatitis and hyposuppression in active hepatitis. In 71.6% of cases thymalin therapy produced an effect manifested by clinico-biochemical remission, an increase in the number of T-lymphocytes, thermostable cells and the normalization of the T-suppressor/T-helper ratio. In these patients sensitization to HBsAg essentially decreased (from 30.5% to 13.9%), while sensitization to human liver lipoprotein retained its high level even after treatment with thymalin.
Study Information
pubmed
1986