Assay of specific IgE antibodies to disodium cromoglycate in serum from a patient with an immediate hypersensitivity reaction.
A 29-year-old man with pollen allergy had experienced immediate adverse reactions, such as itching of the eyes, rhinitis, wheezing, and general urticaria, after using disodium cromoglycate (DSCG) eye drops. The local symptoms were reproducible, and skin tests were strongly positive. With serum from the patient, a RAST was developed for the assay of IgE antibodies. The uptake on RAST disks was 6% of the total activity added, which was a significantly higher level than was found in sera from 35 randomly selected blood donors or in sera from 25 patients tolerating DSCG. By addition of DSCG to the patient's serum, 95% of the binding to paper disks could be inhibited. The induction of specific IgE antibodies was proposed to be a result of a combination of electrostatic and hydrophobic interaction of DSCG and a protein carrier. The substance would thus act as a hapten without any covalent binding to the carrier. DSCG may serve as a model for other nonreactive low-molecular-weight substances suspected to elicit type I-like adverse reactions.[1]References
- Assay of specific IgE antibodies to disodium cromoglycate in serum from a patient with an immediate hypersensitivity reaction. Wass, U., Plaschke, P., Björkander, J., Belin, L. J. Allergy Clin. Immunol. (1988) [Pubmed]
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