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Cold Urticaria: Release into the Circulation of Histamine and Eosinophil Chemotactic Factor of Anaphylaxis during Cold Challenge

List of authors.
  • Nicholas A. Soter, M.D.,
  • Stephen I. Wasserman, M.D.,
  • and K. Frank Austen, M.D.

Abstract

Patients with idiopathic acquired cold-induced urticaria were evaluated for the release of the preformed mast-cell mediators of immediate-type hypersensitivity during a study in which one arm was immersed in ice water while the other arm remained as a control. Blood specimens were obtained from each arm serially over a one-hour interval, and serum specimens were assessed for histamine, eosinophil chemotactic factor of anaphylaxis, and complement components. Levels of histamine and eosinophil chemotactic factor rose in the arm subjected to cold immersion for three minutes, with peak values occurring between two and five minutes and returning to base line by 30 minutes. No changes occurred in the control arm or in the immersed arm of normal subjects. Assessment of the classical and alternative complement pathways showed no abnormalities. This initial observation of release of eosinophil chemotactic factor of anaphylaxis in vivo along with histamine assigns the mast cell a central role in cold urticaria. (N Engl J Med 294:687–690, 1976)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by grants (AI-07722 and AI-10356) from the National Institutes of Health (Dr. Soter is the recipient of a National Research Service Award [1–F32-AI-05240] from the National Institutes of Health and Dr. Wasserman is a postdoctoral fellow of the Arthritis Foundation).

We are indebted to Albert L. Sheffer, M.D., for kindly referring patients and to Ms. Mary J. Riley and Ms. Susan MacDonald Lynch for technical assistance.

Author Affiliations

From the departments of Dermatology and Medicine, Harvard Medical School, the Division of Dermatology, departments of Medicine, Robert B. Brigham and Peter Bent Brigham hospitals, and the Department of Medicine, Robert B. Brigham Hospital (address reprint requests to Dr. Soter at the Robert B. Brigham Hospital, 125 Parker Hill Ave., Boston, MA 02120).

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