M. Simola et al., Changes in skin and nasal sensitivity to allergens and the course of rhinitis; a long-term follow-up study, ANN ALLER A, 82(2), 1999, pp. 152-156
Background: Allergic skin test reactivity tends to decrease with aging, but
whether the decrease is associated with changes in symptom severity and du
ration of the disease or determined only by aging, is poorly understood.
Objective: Our aim was to analyze skin test sensitivity some 20 years after
primary testing and to relate possible changes in reactivity to aging, dur
ation of rhinitis, and changes in severity of rhinitis symptoms.
Methods: One hundred and seven rhinitis patients who had been investigated
earlier were re-interviewed and their current allergy re-assessed after a f
ollow-up of 23 years. All patients were skin prick tested with 22 to 26 com
mon allergens. The allergic rhinitis status was verified with nasal allerge
n challenge.
Results: Skin test reactivity showed a significant trend decreasing towards
older age groups over the period between the two investigations. Rhinitis
symptoms tended, on average, to become milder during the follow-up, but an
association between skin test reactivity and changes in symptom severity co
uld not be verified.
Conclusions: Rhinitis symptoms tend to become milder and the allergic skin
reactivity usually decreases in the long run, but these changes may occur i
ndependently of each other. In this study, the change in rhinitis symptom s
everity seems not to be related to the decrease in skin test reactivity.