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Contact Allergic DermatitisOld Problems and New Techniques
Paul R. Bergstresser, MD
Arch Dermatol. 1989;125(2):276-279.
Abstract
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The problem of contact allergic dermatitis in humans and contact hypersensitivity in laboratory animals begins with the observation that certain reactive compounds, when placed on skin, lead to a reproducible and characteristic inflammatory reaction. The immunologic processes that conspire to produce this damaging tissue reaction are derived from the normal immunologic balance between a protection of self and a destruction of nonself. Experimental work in the last decade has focused on the role of antigen-presenting cells, and specifically Langerhans' cells, in its initiation, as well as on the competing roles of subsets of T lymphocytes in its regulation. For humans, an important goal has been the development of techniques by which tolerization and desensitization may be achieved, and for those who work with laboratory animals, contact hypersensitivity has provided methods to examine immunoregulation in general. In the coming decade, new techniques from molecular biology, molecular genetics, tissue culture, and, above all, shrewd clinical observation will provide a new array of ideas and possibilities.
(Arch Dermatol 1989;125:276-279)
Author Affiliations
From the Department of Dermatology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.
Footnotes
Accepted for publication July 29, 1988.
Reprints not available.
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