PART I

Immuno-Electronmicroscopic Studies of Surface Antigens of Blood Elements. I. Autoantibody on Erythrocytes in Acute Hemolytic Anemia, by Tonietti et al.

Page 179—Methods and Material: The top 6 lines on page 180 should be transposed to page 179 starting as the 3rd line under Source of Erythrocytes, and the section properly reading as follows:

Source of Erythrocytes

The patient (L.S.), a seven year old male, was studied at the Centro Nazionale Transfusione Sangue, C.R.I., in March 1967. His history of anemia dated back to May 1964. Physical examination showed a deeply jaundiced boy. On palpation of the abdomen, the liver was felt 2 cm. below the right costal margin and the spleen 3 cm. below the left costal margin. The superficial lymph nodes were minimally but definitely enlarged. Examination of the blood revealed a red cell count of 1.8 million, a total white count of 3,600 and a platelet count of 180,000 per cu. mm. Bilirubin was 4.9 mg./100 ml. and the osmotic fragility of the red blood cells was normal. The blood group was O CCDee. Etc.

Antiglobulin Tests

Direct agglutination tests performed with the patient’s erythrocytes and antiserum to human globulin and antiserum to human IgG were positive. Absorption of the antihuman globulin with pure IgG rendered the serum incapable of agglutinating the erythrocytes of the patient,6 thus showing that the antibody coating the erythrocytes was of the IgG class.

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