3. The cell count may vary greatly from month to month, or when the interval is but several days, while at other times it may remain very nearly the same after an interval of months.
4. Cases showing natural remissions may show no reduction in the cell count, or other spinal fluid findings.
5. Cases treated with salvarsan, either intraspinously or intravenously, tend to show a more or less rapid fall in the cell count. This count will, as a rule, remain low during treatment, but is likely to rise when treatment has been discontinued, but may rise during treatment after having first fallen.
6. Cases may show remissions during treatment and still have a pleocytosis.
7. Treated cases having the cell count fall to normal may at the same time become very much worse and develop more marked paralytic symptoms.
8. In general paresis the cell count in no way parallels the other spinal fluid findings.
9. In cases in which the other tests show an improvement, for instance cerebrospinal syphilis, the cell count also readily and early drops to normal. At times it may drop to normal before other spinal fluid tests become negative; again it may be last to reach normal.
10. The change in cell count seen in syphilitic disease untreated is also found in non-syphilitic diseases, as brain tumor.
11. The cell count offers nothing of prognostic importance in syphilis of the nervous system unless accompanied by improvement of the other laboratory signs.
12. The cell count is not an index to the predominance of irritative or degenerative changes.