J. Tada et al., PRESENCE OF SPECIFIC IGE ANTIBODIES TO STAPHYLOCOCCAL ENTEROTOXINS INPATIENTS WITH ATOPIC-DERMATITIS, EJD. European journal of dermatology, 6(8), 1996, pp. 552-554
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a pruritic, eczematous dermatosis, the sympt
oms of which fluctuate with remissions and relapses. Staphylococcus au
reus has been suggested to contribute to the exacerbation of ED and sp
ecific IgE antibodies to S. aureus have been detected in a group of pa
tients with AD. We investigated the presence of specific IgE antibodie
s to staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEA, SEE) in AD patients. The amount
of anti-SEA and -SEB IgE antibodies were measured by liquid-phase enz
yme immunoassay (AlaSTAT) in 96 patients. Seventy-seven (80.2%) of 96
patients tested had specific IgE antibodies against SEA and/or SEB. Of
27 patients with severe AD, 23 (85.2%) had both anti-SEA and -SEB IgE
antibodies. Of 58 patients with high serum IgE levels (> 500 IU/ml),
48 (82.8%) had anti-SEA IgE antibodies and 51 (87.9%) had anti-SEB IgE
antibodies. Only one of the serum samples in the control groups was p
ositive to SEA alone. These results suggest that staphylococcal entero
toxins may play an important role, through IgE-mediated immunoresponse
, in the exacerbation and prolongation of the inflammation of AD and t
hat a subset of patients with AD raise an IgE response to enterotoxins
produced by S. aureus on skin surfaces, leading to more severe dermat
itis.