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Topic:Antigen

Antigens are substances that can induce an immune response in horses, typically by being recognized as foreign by the immune system. These substances can include proteins, polysaccharides, or lipids, and are often components of pathogens such as bacteria, viruses, or parasites. In horses, antigens are essential for the activation of both the innate and adaptive immune responses, leading to the production of antibodies and the activation of immune cells. The study of antigens in equines encompasses understanding their structure, the mechanisms by which they are recognized by the immune system, and their role in vaccine development. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the identification, characterization, and immunological impact of antigens in equine health and disease.
Borna disease–neuropathology and pathogenesis.
Current topics in microbiology and immunology    January 1, 1995   Volume 190 39-73 
Gosztonyi G, Ludwig H.Natural BD is a nonpurulent acute/subacute encephalitis of horses and sheep with a propensity to involve the olfactory and limbic systems, and the brain stem. The inflammation is concentrated primarily in the gray matter, but subcortical white matter may also be affected. Experimental BD can be produced in a series of animals from birds to primates. The neuropathology after experimental infection is similar to that in natural disease but the inflammatory changes are more diffuse. In the rat and mouse, a persistent/tolerant infection can also be induced, in which inflammatory changes are conspi...
Platelet activating factor mimics antigen-induced cutaneous inflammatory responses in sweet itch horses.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    January 1, 1995   Volume 44, Issue 2 115-128 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(94)05299-8
Foster AP, Lees P, Cunningham FM.Hypersensitivity responses to biting flies such as Culicoides are believed to be the cause of sweet itch, a seasonal intensely pruritic skin condition of horses. Little is known about the mediators released by antigen in the skin of affected horses. In the present study the cutaneous vascular and cellular responses to intradermally injected platelet activating factor (PAF) have been characterised in sweet itch cases during the active phase of the disease and compared with those of Culicoides antigen extract. Histamine was used as a positive control in vascular permeability studies. Responses w...
A type-specific serological test to distinguish antibodies to equine herpesviruses 4 and 1.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1995   Volume 140, Issue 2 245-258 doi: 10.1007/BF01309860
Crabb BS, MacPherson CM, Reubel GH, Browning GF, Studdert MJ, Drummer HE.We describe a type-specific ELISA, which distinguishes antibody to equine herpesvirus 4 (EHV4; equine rhinopneumonitis) and EHV1 (equine abortion virus) thereby identifying horses that have been infected with either or both of these antigenically related viruses. The antigens used are parts of the EHV4 and EHV1 glycoprotein G (gG) homologues expressed in E. coli as fusion proteins [Crabb and Studdert, 1993: J Virol 67: 6332-6338). The expressed proteins comprise corresponding regions of the gG molecules that are highly divergent and encompass strong, typespecific epitopes. Plasma samples from ...
Antigenic, morphologic, and molecular characterization of new Ehrlichia risticii isolates.
Journal of clinical microbiology    December 1, 1994   Volume 32, Issue 12 3026-3033 doi: 10.1128/jcm.32.12.3026-3033.1994
Chaichanasiriwithaya W, Rikihisa Y, Yamamoto S, Reed S, Crawford TB, Perryman LE, Palmer GH.Ehrlichia risticii causes an acute infectious disease in horses called Potomac horse fever. To investigate the biological diversity of E. risticii organisms, nine E. risticii isolates derived from the peripheral blood monocytes of clinically sick horses in Ohio and Kentucky during the summers of 1991 and 1993 were compared with Illinois and Virginia isolates originally obtained from horses in Maryland in 1984. Seven of the nine isolates (081, 606, 380, 679, As, Co, and Ov) formed large morulae (tightly packed inclusions of ehrlichial organisms). The remaining isolates, including 1984 isolates,...
Treatment of aplastic anemia with an investigational antilymphocyte serum prepared in rabbits.
The American journal of the medical sciences    December 1, 1994   Volume 308, Issue 6 338-343 doi: 10.1097/00000441-199412000-00005
Stein RS, Means RT, Krantz SB, Flexner JM, Greer JP.The authors evaluated antilymphocyte serum prepared in rabbits (ALS-R) as an alternative to antilymphocyte serum prepared in horses (ALG-H) in the therapy of aplastic anemia. Between 1980 and 1993, 57 evaluable patients received ALS-R and prednisone +/- cyclosporine +/- androgens. Standard response criteria were used and patients were evaluated at 3 months from the start of therapy. Median age was 43 years. Disease was present for up to 2 months in 24 patients, 2-5 months in 14 patients, and 6 months or more in 19 patients. Disease was severe in 30 patients and moderate in 27. Responses occurr...
Genetic and antigenic analysis of the influenza virus responsible for the 1992 Hong Kong equine influenza epizootic.
Virology    November 1, 1994   Volume 204, Issue 2 673-679 doi: 10.1006/viro.1994.1583
Lai AC, Lin YP, Powell DG, Shortridge KF, Webster RG, Daly J, Chambers TM.An outbreak of influenza occurred among thoroughbred racehorses in Hong Kong in November-December 1992, with morbidity of 37%. All horses involved had been vaccinated against equine-1 and equine-2 influenza viruses but not against the virus responsible for the 1989 equine influenza outbreak in northern China (influenza A/equine/Jilin/89, subtype H3N8). Therefore the source and nature of the virus causing the Hong Kong outbreak was investigated. Virus isolated from a horse infected during the outbreak was used for genetic analysis. All the viral gene segments were similar to those of equine-2 (...
Monoclonal antibodies to equine arteritis virus proteins identify the GL protein as a target for virus neutralization.
The Journal of general virology    September 1, 1994   Volume 75 ( Pt 9) 2439-2444 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-75-9-2439
Deregt D, de Vries AA, Raamsman MJ, Elmgren LD, Rottier PJ.Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) to equine arteritis virus (EAV) proteins were produced and characterized. The protein specificities of eight MAbs were determined definitively by immunoprecipitation of EAV proteins expressed from vaccinia virus recombinants (VVRs). Included were two new VVRs produced for this study, expressing the M and the GL proteins, respectively. Three MAbs were determined to be N-specific and five MAbs recognized the GL protein. One GL-specific MAb, 17F5, of the IgA class, efficiently neutralized EAV infectivity. In competitive binding assays (CBAs), the N-specific MAbs defin...
Pathology of equine pneumonia associated with transport and isolation of Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus.
Journal of comparative pathology    August 1, 1994   Volume 111, Issue 2 205-212 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(05)80052-0
Oikawa M, Kamada M, Yoshikawa Y, Yoshikawa T.Seven horses that died of pneumonia associated with transport yielded Streptococcus equi subsp. zooepidemicus (S.z.) from their pulmonary lesions. These lesions were divisible roughly into two types, serous haemorrhagic pneumonia and multiple foci of coagulative necrosis, which were considered to reflect a temporal difference in the process of lesion formation. Immunohistologically, S.z. antigen was detected in both types of lesion. Acute necrotic lacunar tonsillitis was considered to play an important role in the onset of the pneumonia.
Polymorphic expression of an equine T lymphocyte and neutrophil subset marker.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    July 1, 1994   Volume 42, Issue 1 83-89 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(94)90091-4
Lunn DP, Holmes MA, Duffus WP.This report describes the further characterization of a group of antibodies which have been assigned to Workshop Cluster 1 by the First International Workshop on Equine Leucocyte Antigens. These antibodies recognize a 22 kDa antigen, which is present on a large subset of T lymphocytes and neutrophils, and on medullary thymocytes. The antigen is polymorphic in its expression, and three equine phenotypes could be identified using the described antibodies. The function and homology of the antigen recognized by these antibodies are unknown.
An equine B cell surface antigen defined by a monoclonal antibody.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    July 1, 1994   Volume 42, Issue 1 91-102 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(94)90092-2
Zhang CH, Donaldson WL, Antczak DF.A surface antigen of equine B lymphocytes was identified using the Equine Leucocyte Antigen Workshop antibody WS 65. This marker was expressed on almost all equine B cells, but not on T cells, granulocytes or thymocytes. WS 65 strongly stained cells in the follicular areas of lymph nodes and cells in the splenic nodules when tested on frozen tissue sections by immunohistochemistry. Equine leukemic T cells were not labeled by WS 65, and neither were the cells from a horse with B cell leukemia, although these latter cells carried surface immunoglobulin. Immunoprecipitation of lymphocyte membrane...
Studies on the frequency and associations of equine leucocyte antigens in sarcoid and summer dermatitis.
Animal genetics    June 1, 1994   Volume 25 Suppl 1 75-80 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1994.tb00406.x
Lazary S, Marti E, Szalai G, Gaillard C, Gerber H.The equine leucocyte antigen (ELA) types and the clinical diagnosis for equine sarcoid and summer dermatitis were evaluated in 2026 horses representing five breeds. Data were analysed in unrelated animals and in family material. In the case of equine sarcoid, a strong association was observed between the ELA class II DW13 antigen and its effect on Swiss (cP < 0.001), French (cP < 0.0001) and Irish (cP < 0.01) Warmblood horses. The class I antigen A3 occurred more frequently in sarcoid-affected French horses (cP < 0.001). These results confirm our earlier findings (Gerber et al. 1988). Among Fr...
Snake antivenoms from hyperimmunized horses: comparison of the antivenom activity and biological properties of their whole IgG and F(ab’)2 fragments.
Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology    June 1, 1994   Volume 32, Issue 6 725-734 doi: 10.1016/0041-0101(94)90341-7
Morais JF, de Freitas MC, Yamaguchi IK, dos Santos MC, da Silva WD.IgG and F(ab')2 fragments were prepared from horse plasma rich in specific antibodies against Brazilian Bothrops or Crotalus venoms. Both preparations, free of gross contamination with non-immunoglobulin proteins, were able to combine in vitro with their respective antigens, forming immune complexes at antigen excess, equivalence or antibody excess, and activating the C system, through either the classical or the alternative pathways. The IgG preparation was more effective in neutralizing the lethal factors in Bothrops or Crotalus venoms, compared with the F(ab')2 fragments. In contrast, IgG a...
Cellular and viral specificity of equine infectious anemia virus Tat transactivation.
Virology    May 1, 1994   Volume 200, Issue 2 632-642 doi: 10.1006/viro.1994.1226
Maury WJ, Carpenter S, Graves K, Chesebro B.Lentiviruses vary in their dependence on a functional tat gene during their viral life cycle. To begin to understand the viral and cellular parameters controlling equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) transactivation, we investigated Tat function and Tat and LTR structural requirements necessary for successful transactivation. EIAV Tat expression was required for detection of viral antigens from a full-length provirus. The level of transactivation by EIAV Tat as measured by LTR-CAT assays correlated well with viral antigen expression. Using horse/mouse somatic cell hybrids (SCH), a single SCH ...
Trypanosoma brucei, T. congolense and T. vivax infections in horses on a farm in Kenya.
Tropical animal health and production    May 1, 1994   Volume 26, Issue 2 95-101 doi: 10.1007/BF02239908
Kihurani DO, Nantulya VM, Mbiuki SM, Mogoa E, Nguhiu-Mwangi J, Mbithi PM.Equines are particularly susceptible to infection with Trypanosoma evansi and T. brucei, but rarely is natural T. congolense and T. vivax infection seen in horses. An outbreak of trypanosomosis occurred in a herd of horses used for patrolling the pineapple fields on the Del Monte Farm, Thika, Kenya initially involving 6 horses. On subsequent screening of the entire group, T. brucei, T. congolense and T. vivax infections were detected in 16 of the 35 horses. The tests used for diagnosis included microscopic examination of stained blood smears, buffy coat technique, mouse inoculation and antigen...
Identification of diagnostic antigens for South American Babesia caballi infections.
International journal for parasitology    April 1, 1994   Volume 24, Issue 2 255-258 doi: 10.1016/0020-7519(94)90034-5
Böse R, Peymann B, Barbosa IP.Sera from 60 horses held in breeding herd in Brazil were examined monthly by ELISA, immunofluorescence antibody test (IFAT) and Western blot. All foals had maternal antibodies detectable by ELISA and IFAT, and sero-conversion took place between the 2nd and 5th month of age. The 48 and 50 kDa antigens were recognized first in the course of infection. Of 79 sera taken after sero-conversion 78 reacted with the 48 kDa antigen, 76 with the 50 kDa, 50 with the 70 kDa, 54 with the 112 kDa, 72 with the 141 kDa antigen. In general, sera from horses older than 1 year reacted with all 5 diagnostic antige...
In-situ hybridization for demonstration of equine herpesvirus type 1 DNA in paraffin wax-embedded tissues and its use in horses with disseminated necrotizing myeloencephalitis.
Journal of comparative pathology    April 1, 1994   Volume 110, Issue 3 215-225 doi: 10.1016/s0021-9975(08)80275-7
Schmidt P, Meyer H, Hübert P, Hafner A, Andiel E, Grabner A, Dahme E.The detection of equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) in infected cell cultures, and in tissues taken at necropsy, by the in-situ hybridization technique is described. A 4.9 kb Bam HI fragment of EHV-1 vaccine strain RacH was used as a probe after labelling with [alpha-32P] thymidine 5'-triphosphate ([32P]TTP) or digoxigenin-deoxyuridine 5'-triphosphate (dUTP). Both probes specifically detected EHV-1 DNA in either cytospin or paraffin wax-embedded preparations of infected cells. The digoxigenin-labelled probe was further used to examine tissue sections of equine fetuses which had been aborted due...
Characterization of a red blood cell antigen in donkeys and mules associated with neonatal isoerythrolysis.
Animal genetics    April 1, 1994   Volume 25, Issue 2 119-120 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1994.tb00091.x
McClure JJ, Koch C, Traub-Dargatz J.A red cell antigen of donkeys and mules was identified using antibodies in serum from a mare which produced a mule foal affected with neonatal isoerythrolysis (NI). Subsequently antibodies with similar activity were identified in the sera of other mares which had produced mule foals and were produced by immunization of horses with blood from donkeys. The antigen detected by these antibodies does not correspond to any recognized horse red cell alloantigen. This may be a xenoantigen since all donkeys (and mules) tested have shared this antigen and all horses tested have lacked the antigen. The r...
Antigenicity and immunogenicity of equine influenza vaccines containing a Carbomer adjuvant.
Epidemiology and infection    April 1, 1994   Volume 112, Issue 2 421-437 doi: 10.1017/s0950268800057848
Mumford JA, Wilson H, Hannant D, Jessett DM.Equine influenza vaccines containing inactivated whole virus and Carbomer adjuvant stimulated higher levels and longer lasting antibody to haemagglutinin in ponies than vaccines of equivalent antigenic content containing aluminium phosphate adjuvants. Five months after the third dose of vaccine containing Carbomer adjuvant, ponies were protected against clinical disease induced by an aerosol of virulent influenza virus (A/equine/Newmarket/79, H3N8). In contrast ponies which received vaccine containing aluminium phosphate adjuvant were susceptible to infection and disease. There was an inverse ...
Substance P immunohistochemical study of the sensory innervation of normal subchondral bone in the equine metacarpophalangeal joint.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1994   Volume 55, Issue 1 28-33 
Nixon AJ, Cummings JF.Serial sections of bone and soft tissue from the metacarpophalangeal joints of 2 mature and 2 immature horses were evaluated for substance P immunoreactive sensory nerve fibers. Formalin-fixed specimens were sectioned, either nondemineralized or demineralized with formic acid or EDTA. Rabbit antiserum to substance P (SP) was used in the streptavidin-biotin-peroxidase complex method for immunolocalization of SP antigen, and staining with 3,3'-diaminobenzidine was used for permanent identification of SP fibers. Abundant sensory nerve fibers were identified in the joint capsule, synovial membrane...
Duration of antigen-induced hyperresponsiveness in horses with allergic respiratory disease and possible links with early airway obstruction.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    December 1, 1993   Volume 16, Issue 4 469-476 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1993.tb00213.x
Fairbairn SM, Lees P, Page CP, Cunningham FM.Antigen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness in allergic horses has previously been demonstrated when clinical signs of acute airway obstruction were apparent, as a consequence of exposure of animals to hay and straw for variable periods of time, and repeat measurements of hyperresponsiveness have been made no earlier than 1 week after challenge. In the present study airway responsiveness to methacholine has been measured in normal horses and allergic horses in clinical remission before and 24, 48 and 72 h after a hay and straw challenge of fixed, short, duration (7 h). Correlations between earl...
The outbreak of equine influenza (H3N8) in the United Kingdom in 1989: diagnostic use of an antigen capture ELISA.
The Veterinary record    November 20, 1993   Volume 133, Issue 21 515-519 doi: 10.1136/vr.133.21.515
Livesay GJ, O'Neill T, Hannant D, Yadav MP, Mumford JA.In July 1989 influenza A/equine-2 (H3N8) was isolated from a nasopharyngeal swab taken from a non-thoroughbred horse exhibiting acute clinical respiratory disease. This was the first isolation of equine influenza virus in the United Kingdom since 1981. Subsequent investigations of acute respiratory disease in horses indicated that the infection was dispersed throughout the UK. However, unlike the previous epidemic of 1979, the first horses from which the virus was isolated had been vaccinated. This outbreak of influenza provided an opportunity to evaluate an antigen capture ELISA, directed aga...
The protective M proteins of the equine group C streptococci.
Veterinary microbiology    November 1, 1993   Volume 37, Issue 3-4 389-395 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(93)90037-8
Timoney JF, Mukhtar MM.The group C streptococci are the most commonly isolated bacteria from disease states in the horse. Important virulence factors of S. equi and S. zooepidemicus are the hyaluronic acid capsule and the antiphagocytic fibrillar M protein located on the surface of the cell wall and extending into and through the capsule. The hyaluronic acid capsule is non-antigenic and so is not involved in protective immunity. The M protein, a superantigen, elicits very strong B and T cell responses that may result in protective immunity mediated by opsonic antibodies in plasma and by locally synthesized IgG and I...
Developmentally regulated changes in the glycoproteins of the equine embryonic capsule.
Journal of reproduction and fertility    November 1, 1993   Volume 99, Issue 2 653-664 doi: 10.1530/jrf.0.0990653
Oriol JG, Sharom FJ, Betteridge KJ.The embryonic capsule, which covers the equine blastocyst after it loses its zona pellucida, is composed of mucin-like glycoproteins. In the present study, we investigated both macroscopic and molecular changes in the capsule during development. The weight of the capsule increased from day 11-12 of pregnancy and reached a maximum at about day 18, coinciding with the time during which the conceptus migrates extensively throughout the uterus. The sialic acid content of the capsule declined markedly from about day 16, the time of conceptus 'fixation' in the uterus, which suggests a unique develop...
Expression of an evolutionarily conserved function associated molecule on sheep, horse and cattle natural killer cells.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    October 1, 1993   Volume 38, Issue 3-4 273-282 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(93)90087-k
Harris DT, Camenisch TD, Jaso-Friedmann L, Evans DL.Natural killer (NK) cells are large granular lymphocytes that lyse a wide variety of transformed and virally-infected target cells without prior exposure to antigen, and without restriction by major histocompatibility complex antigens. Although NK cells have been identified in a variety of mammalian species, how NK cells recognize antigen and trigger lysis is unknown. Recently, monoclonal antibodies made against NK-like cells from teleost fish were shown to react with NK cells from humans and rats, and to inhibit their cytolytic activity. The role of this apparently evolutionarily conserved fu...
Early neutrophil but not eosinophil or platelet recruitment to the lungs of allergic horses following antigen exposure.
Clinical and experimental allergy : journal of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology    October 1, 1993   Volume 23, Issue 10 821-828 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.1993.tb00259.x
Fairbairn SM, Page CP, Lees P, Cunningham FM.Previous studies have shown that bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from horses with allergic respiratory disease and showing clinical symptoms contains increased numbers of neutrophils. In some cases, the eosinophil count is also increased. In this study the time course of changes in lung function and the accumulation of radiolabelled leucocytes and platelets in the lungs of allergic and normal horses has been examined during a 7 hr allergen exposure. Antigen challenge had no effect on pleural pressure or the distribution of radiolabelled neutrophils, eosinophils or platelets in normal horses. In c...
Comparison of IgE-binding antigens in horse dander and a mixture of horse hair and skin scrapings.
Allergy    October 1, 1993   Volume 48, Issue 7 535-541 doi: 10.1111/j.1398-9995.1993.tb01111.x
Fjeldsgaard BE, Paulsen BS.Extracts of horse dander (HD) and horse hair and skin scrapings (HHSS) have been compared with respect to their content of proteins and carbohydrates. The protein content of HD is more than double that of HHSS, while the carbohydrate content is of the same order. SDS-PAGE and IEF, both combined with immunoblotting, and CIE/CRIE showed the IgE-binding ability of the proteins/glycoproteins present in the two extracts. SDS-PAGE/immunoblotting showed the presence of mainly the same IgE-binding bands in the two extracts. Nine were detected in HD, and seven in HHSS. Four of these were glycoproteins....
A dot immunobinding assay in comparison with the gel diffusion test for the detection of equine herpesvirus-1 antigen from field samples.
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    September 1, 1993   Volume 12, Issue 3 923-930 doi: 10.20506/rst.12.3.728
Richa , Grover YP, Charan S.The authors describe a rapid and simple dot immunobinding assay (DIA) for detection and identification of equine herpesvirus-1 antigen in field samples from cases of abortion, stillbirth, perinatal foal mortality and paralysis. The assay employs a nitrocellulose membrane to which antigen is adsorbed as a dot. Antigen is identified as a coloured dot using a procedure based on the principle of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In all, 61 samples were tested by DIA and the test was compared with conventional agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID). With DIA, 44 (72%) samples gave positive result...
Strangles.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1993   Volume 9, Issue 2 365-374 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30403-0
Timoney JF.The etiology, epizootiology, pathogenesis, and clinical presentation of strangles are described. Streptococcus equi, the causative organism, is highly host-adapted to Equidae and shows no antigenic variation. Protective immunity apparently is mediated by a combination of serum opsonic and nasopharyngeal mucosal humoral responses. Vaccines based on M protein or inactivated bacterial suspensions may reduce the clinical attack rate by 50%, a level of protection much lower than that produced during recovery from strangles.
Evaluation of agar gel immunodiffusion and indirect fluorescent antibody assays as supplemental tests for dourine in equids.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1993   Volume 54, Issue 8 1201-1208 
Hagebock JM, Chieves L, Frerichs WM, Miller CD.The agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID) and indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) assays were evaluated as supplemental tests to the complement-fixation (CF) test, the official US importation certification test for dourine in equids. The American stabilate (n = 10 animals) or the Canadian stabilate (n = 6 animals) of Trypanosoma equiperdum cultured in rat blood was administered by catheterization and infusion in the urogenital tract of 16 equids. To assess parasitemia and serologic responses by use of the CF, AGID, and IFA tests, a total of 787 serum and blood samples were obtained from equids befor...
Evaluation of local endobronchial antigen challenges in the investigation of equine chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1993   Volume 25, Issue 4 269-272 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1993.tb02961.x
McGorum BC, Dixon PM.Local transendoscopic endobronchial antigen challenge, which has proved to be a valuable clinical and research technique in the study of human pulmonary hypersensitivity, was evaluated in control and asymptomatic COPD--affected horses. Transendoscopic endobronchial challenges with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), Micropolyspora faeni extract at 60 and 600 micrograms/ml and mouldy hay extract elicited neutrophilic airway inflammatory responses in control (N = 5-7) and asymptomatic COPD-affected (N = 5-7) horses, as determined by cytological examinations of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) ha...
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