Journal Article10.1016/0091-6749(80)90158-X
A controlled study of the effectiveness of the Rinkel method of immunotherapy for ragweed pollen hay fever
Thomas E. Van Metre,Thomas E. Van Metre,N. Franklin Adkinson,N. Franklin Adkinson,Lawrence M. Lichtenstein,Lawrence M. Lichtenstein,Michael R. Mardiney,Michael R. Mardiney,Philip S. Norman,Philip S. Norman,Gary L. Rosenberg,Gary L. Rosenberg,Anne K. Sobotka,Anne K. Sobotka,M.D. Valentine,M.D. Valentine +15 more
TL;DR: Rinkel method immunotherapy with ragweed pollen extract was no more effective than placebo given in an imitation of the Rinkel method, and despite the absence of specific effect on symptom-medication scores and measured immunologic variates, 10 of the 12 ragweed-treated patients were of the opinion that their hay fever symptoms during the rag weed pollen season were less severe in 1978 than in 1977 and that they had been helped by Rinkel process immunotherapy.
read more
Abstract: In a double-blind study, we compared the effects of the Rinkel method of immunotherapy with ragweed pollen extract and placebo on symptoms of ragweed hay fever and immunologic parameters in 24 ragweed-sensitive patients. Each had a skin-test end point by Rinkel serial dilution titration to ragweed pollen extract at 1:312,500 w/v or greater dilution, a 2 + skin test to ragweed AgE at 0.1 microgram /ml or greater dilution, and in vitro leukocyte histamine release by ragweed pollen extract. None had had immunotherapy for at least 7 yr. Patients matched on the basis of leukocyte histamine release by ragweed were assigned to two treatment groups (12 patients in each group). One group received ragweed pollen extract, and the other, placebo, both administered by the Rinkel method between June and October, 1978. Treatment doses were derived from skin-test end points. The median maintenance ("optimal dose") for patients receiving ragweed pollen extract was 0.53 ml of 1:312,500 w/v and the mean cumulative dose of ragweed pollen extract given during the study contained 0.094 micrograms of ragweed AgE. Symptom-medication scores of all patients rose and fell with ragweed pollen counts. No significant differences were observed in mean daily symptom-medication scores, antiragweed IgG or IgE levels, leukocyte histamine release by ragweed, total IgE levels, or skin-test end-point dilutions with ragweed pollen extract between the group receiving ragweed pollen extract and the group receiving placebo. Despite the absence of specific effect on symptom-medication scores and measured immunologic variates, 10 3f the 12 ragweed-treated patients and 10 of the 12 placebo-treated patients were of the opinion that their hay fever symptoms during the ragweed pollen season were less severe in 1978 than in 1977 and that they had been helped by Rinkel method immunotherapy. Under the conditions of the study, Rinkel method immunotherapy with ragweed pollen extract was no more effective than placebo given in an imitation of the Rinkel method.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Efficacy and safety of subcutaneous immunotherapy with a biologically standardized extract of Ambrosia artemisiifolia pollen: a double‐blind, placebo‐controlled study
Corrado Mirone,F. Albert,A. Tosi,F. Mocchetti,S. Mosca,M. Giorgino,S. Pecora,S. Parmiani,Claudio Ortolani +8 more
TL;DR: The efficacy of the injective immunotherapy for this allergen has been documented only in Northern America and it is unclear whether this data can be generalized to Europe.
45
Functional and Immunoreactive Levels of IgG4 Correlate with Clinical Responses during the Maintenance Phase of House Dust Mite Immunotherapy
Mulin Feng,Qiujuan Su,Xuxin Lai,Mo Xian,Xu Shi,Peter Adler Würtzen,Rundong Qin,Xiaohui Zeng,Jing Li +8 more
TL;DR: Investigation of the relationship between clinical outcomes and functional responses of allergen-specific IgG4 and specific IgE during Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus s.c.allergen immunotherapy in allergic rhinitis and/or asthma patients found immunologic tolerance can be induced with SCIT when maintenance phase is achieved.
43
Controversial Practices in Allergy
TL;DR: It is important for physicians to understand the basis for these procedures and to advise patients accordingly, since allergic diseases are common and the economic impact of medical care for these patients is great.
42
Efficacy of a Screening Radioallergosorbent Test
TL;DR: Present is a method for utilizing the RAST, with all its inherent advantages, at a competitive cost to both negatively and positively responding patients, and illustrates the efficacy of this technique.
38
Quantitation of antigen-specific immunoglobulin G in human serum. II. Comparison of radioimmunoprecipitation and solid-phase radioimmunoassay techniques for measurement of immunoglobulin G specific for a complex allergen mixture (yellow jacket venom).
TL;DR: It is concluded that for some YJ sera, the SPRIA gives more accurate estimates of IgG antibody content than does the RIP assay, and presents several advantages over the RIP in the measurement of specific IgG in complex antigen mixtures.
32
References
•Book
Nonparametric statistics for the behavioral sciences
Sidney Siegel
- 01 Jan 1956
TL;DR: This is the revision of the classic text in the field, adding two new chapters and thoroughly updating all others as discussed by the authors, and the original structure is retained, and the book continues to serve as a combined text/reference.
36.3K
An automated continuous-flow system for the extraction and fluorometric analysis of histamine.
TL;DR: The automated continuous-flow system for the extraction and fluorometric analysis of histamine is accurate, specific, precise, rapid, and very sensitive.
763
A double-blind study of the effectiveness and specificity of injecton therapy in ragweed hay fever.
F C Lowell,W Franklin +1 more
TL;DR: The mere magnitude of this medical enterprise might suffice as evidence for its efficacy except that objective criteria for success or failure are lacking and that factors other than injection treatment may profoundly influence the course of pollenosis and the opinion of both patient and doctor.
276
Related Papers (5)
Thomas E. Van Metre,Thomas E. Van Metre,N. Franklin Adkinson,N. Franklin Adkinson,Frank J. Amodio,Frank J. Amodio,Anne Kagey-Sobotka,Anne Kagey-Sobotka,Lawrence M. Lichtenstein,Lawrence M. Lichtenstein,Michael R. Mardiney,Michael R. Mardiney,Philip S. Norman,Philip S. Norman,Gary L. Rosenberg,Gary L. Rosenberg +15 more