Good syndrome
Good syndrome is a rare paraneoplastic syndrome in which a thymoma causes hypogammaglobulinemia and humoral immunodeficiency. It has been estimated to occur in 0.2%–2% of thymomas .
- thymoma
- low to absent B-cells
- T-cell mediated defects
- CD4 T-cell lymphopenia
- inverted CD4/CD8+ T-cell ratio
Patients with Good syndrome are highly susceptible to bacterial infections. Radiologically, patients with a thymoma may present with findings compatible with immunodeficiency, such as chronic lung disease.
History and etymology
Good syndrome was first described by Robert "Bob" Alan Good, (1922-2003) an American immunologist, in 1955 .
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Assoziationen und Differentialdiagnosen zu thymoma with immunodeficiency: