Title Effect of rhinovirus 39 infection on cellular immune parameters in allergic and nonallergic subjects.
Author Skoner, D P; Whiteside, T L; Wilson, J W; Doyle, W J; Herberman, R B; Fireman, P
Journal J Allergy Clin Immunol Publication Year/Month 1993-Nov
PMID 8227865 PMCID -N/A-
Affiliation 1.Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh, PA.

Patients with allergic rhinitis (AR), compared with nonallergic persons, have been reported to respond differently to a variety of stimuli, some of which are immunologic in nature. This study compared the systemic cellular immune responses to experimental rhinovirus (RV) 39 challenge in RV-39-seronegative AR (n = 20) and nonallergic (n = 18) subjects. Peripheral blood was obtained before, 4 or 7 days after, and 23 days after RV-39 intranasal challenge and assayed for the number and function of various white blood cells. All subjects were infected, as manifested by viral shedding in nasal secretions or seroconversion. RV-39 induced marked changes from baseline values in both immune cell number and functions. Compared with nonallergic subjects, AR subjects manifested different responses for the following parameters: (1) numbers of total white blood cells and lymphocytes (smaller increases on day 4), (2) helper/suppressor T cell ratio (absence of an increase on day 7 and presence of an increase on day 23), (3) number of IL-2 receptor-positive suppressor T cells (presence of a decrease on day 7), (4) natural killer (NK) cell numbers (absence of an increase on day 4 and presence of increases on days 7 and 23), (5) NK/T cell ratio (absence of an increase on day 4 and a decrease on day 7), (6) NK cell activity (a blunted decrease on day 7 and absence of a decrease on day 23), and (7) RV-39-induced lymphocyte proliferation (exaggerated increase on day 4). The results show that intranasal challenge with RV-39 induced RV-39-specific and nonspecific systemic cellular immune responses and a unique immunologic response pattern in AR subjects.

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