The Journal of Experimental Medicine, Vol 31, 313-334,
Copyright, 1920, by The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research New York
APPEARANCE OF ISOAGGLUTININS IN INFANTS AND CHILDREN
W. M. Happ M.D.1
1 From the Department of Pediatrics, the Johns Hopkins University, and the Harriet Lane Home and the Research Laboratory of the Phipps Tuberculosis Dispensary, the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore.
1. The isoagglutination reaction of 131 infants and children from birth to 10
years was examined by testing their serum and washed corpuscles microscopically against the serum and corpuscles of each of the four adult groups.
2. The grouping as present in adults is rarely present in blood from the umbilical cord.
3. At birth and during the 1st month of life isoagglutination is rarely present, but the percentage of infants in whom the isoagglutinin group is established increases with age, so that after 1 year the group is usually established, and after 2 years is always present as in adults.
4. The grouping is established in the corpuscles before it is established in the serum; i.e., the corpuscles acquire agglutinophilic receptors before the serum acquires agglutinin. Therefore, Group I is the first group to be formed and Group IV is the last.
5. The early grouping in the corpuscles before the group is established in the serum is liable to change by the acquisition of new receptors.
6. When the grouping has been established in both serum and corpuscles it does not change.
7. Isoagglutinins are present in mother's milk and the grouping is identical with that in the mother's blood. These agglutinins are probably not transmitted to the nursing infant through the milk.
8. On account of the differences between the agglutination reactions in the blood of mother and child it is not safe to transfuse an infant from its mother without making the preliminary tests.
Submitted on August 26, 1919