THE CELLULAR IMMUNE DEFECT IN CHRONIC MUCOCUTANEOUS CANDIDIASIS

Cutaneous hypersensitivity of the delayed type can be divided into three sequential phases or steps: (1) antigen recognition and/or processing; (2) production of chemotactic factors or mediators which attract unsensitised cells (monocytes) to the site of the reaction, and (3) changes in the vascular...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Lancet (British edition) 1969-01, Vol.293 (7609), p.1286-1288
Hauptverfasser: Chilgren, RichardA, Quie, PaulG, Meuwissen, HilaireJ, Good, RobertA, Hong, Richard
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container_end_page 1288
container_issue 7609
container_start_page 1286
container_title The Lancet (British edition)
container_volume 293
creator Chilgren, RichardA
Quie, PaulG
Meuwissen, HilaireJ
Good, RobertA
Hong, Richard
description Cutaneous hypersensitivity of the delayed type can be divided into three sequential phases or steps: (1) antigen recognition and/or processing; (2) production of chemotactic factors or mediators which attract unsensitised cells (monocytes) to the site of the reaction, and (3) changes in the vascular endothelium and "activation" of the monocytes resulting in perivascular mononuclear cell infiltration at the site of antigen injection, interpreted clinically as erythema and induration. Three patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis had generalised cutaneous anergy. Paradoxically, their lymphocytes respond in vitro to phytohæmagglutinin, Candida antigen, and allogeneic cells, indicating an intact antigen recognition and processing phase. Two of the three patients were given lymphocytes from healthy donors, and this resulted in temporary reversal of the generalised cutaneous anergy. Since in such passive-transfer experiments only a small percentage of donor cells are found in the resultant delayed hypersensitivity reaction, the restoration of reactivity implies an adequate population of host cells capable of expressing the inflammatory and clinical events of the cutaneous reaction. The cutaneous anergy in these three patients then seems to result from a deficiency of mediator production, probably migration inhibitory factor, or the presence of an inhibitor to this factor or to other mediators.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0140-6736(69)92223-5
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source MEDLINE; ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Adult
Candida
Candidiasis, Cutaneous - immunology
Candidiasis, Oral - immunology
Candidiasis, Vulvovaginal - immunology
Chronic Disease
Female
Humans
Hypersensitivity, Delayed
Lectins
Lymphocytes - immunology
Male
Skin Tests
title THE CELLULAR IMMUNE DEFECT IN CHRONIC MUCOCUTANEOUS CANDIDIASIS
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