The Journal of Immunology, 1941, 40: 289-309.
Copyright © 1941 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
Changes in Serological Reactions and Tissue-Sensitivity in Hay-Fever Patients during the Early Months of Treatment1
William B. Sherman
From the Department of Allergy, Roosevelt Hospital, New York City, N. Y.
Abstract
- 1. Thirteen typical cases of ragweed hay-fever were studied with intracutaneous, conjunctival, and serological tests before and after the first three months of treatment with injections of pollen-extract.
- 2. In 12 of the 13 patients the reaction to intracutaneous tests with ragweed pollen-extract, which had been preserved by the cryochem-process, was less after treatment.
- 3. In 11 of 13 patients the reaction to conjunctival tests with ragweed pollen-extract was less after treatment.
- 4. The sera of 12 of the 13 patients showed more skin-sensitizing antibody, as measured by the dilution-test, after treatment.
- 5. All of the sera required more ragweed pollen-extract to neutralize the skin-sensitizing antibody after treatment.
- 6. All post-treatment sera inactivated one of the antigenic fractions (fraction 1) of low-ragweed pollen-extract. In only one case did the serum inactivate the second antigenic fraction (fraction 2) of the pollen-extract.
- 7. None of the sera taken before treatment inactivated ragweed pollen-antigen.
- 8. Patients who were sensitive to both antigenic fractions of ragweed pollen but who developed antibody inactivating only one fraction did not develop tolerance for large doses of ragweed pollen-extract and had more constitutional reactions than those who were sensitive to only one fraction and developed antibody inactivating that fraction.
- 9. Sera that inactivated only the more active fraction (fraction 1) of the ragweed pollen-extract showed blocking activity when tested by the neutralization-method. When such sera were tested by the dilution-method, the results obtained depended on the way in which the serum used to sensitize cutaneous sites reacted to the two antigenic fractions of the ragweed pollen.
Footnotes
1 Presented before the Society for the Study of Asthma and Allied Conditions, Atlantic City, N. J., May 4, 1940.
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