Literature DB >> 18946193

Levocetirizine modulates lymphocyte activation in patients with allergic rhinitis.

Fadia Mahmoud1, Nirmina Arifhodzic, David Haines, Ladislav Novotney.   

Abstract

Levocetirizine, a second generation non-sedating antihistamine that blocks the H(1) histamine receptor, may exhibit immunoregulatory properties that augment its primary pharmacological mechanism. To investigate this possibility, 13 Kuwaiti seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR) patients were treated with levocetirizine for four weeks in comparison with a 7-member placebo-treated control group, followed by clinical evaluation and flow cytometric analysis of peripheral venous blood for inflammatory cell and lymphocyte subpopulation profiles. Relative to the controls, levocetirizine-treated patients exhibited an expected reduction in early phase allergic symptoms, including sneezing (P<0.001), nasal itching (P<0.01), nasal congestion, and running nose (P<0.001); reduced percentages of eosinophils (P<0.05); and three subpopulations of activated T lymphocytes: CD4+CD29+, CD4+CD212+, and CD4+CD54+ (P<0.05). Levocetirizine treatment also correlated with a significant increase in the percentage of CD4+CD25+ T cells (P<0.001). The ability of levocetirizine to reduce percentage representation of cell phenotypes known to contribute to inflammatory tissue damage (eosinophils, CD4+CD29+, CD4+CD212+, and CD4+CD54+) and expand percentages of CD4+CD25+, which may include protective immunoregulatory (Treg) cells, indicates that the drug has pharmacological potential beyond the immediate effects of H(1) histamine-receptor inhibition. Although the present data does not define a therapeutic mechanism, the results reported here establish important trends that may be used to guide future mechanistic examination of immunoregulatory capacity of H(1) inhibitors.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18946193     DOI: 10.1254/jphs.08037fp

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pharmacol Sci        ISSN: 1347-8613            Impact factor:   3.337


  4 in total

1.  Effects of baicalin in CD4 + CD29 + T cell subsets of ulcerative colitis patients.

Authors:  Feng-Yan Yu; Shao-Gang Huang; Hai-Yan Zhang; Hua Ye; Hong-Gang Chi; Ying Zou; Ru-Xi Lv; Xue-Bao Zheng
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2014-11-07       Impact factor: 5.742

Review 2.  Histamine H1-receptor antagonists with immunomodulating activities: potential use for modulating T helper type 1 (Th1)/Th2 cytokine imbalance and inflammatory responses in allergic diseases.

Authors:  T Okamoto; S Iwata; K Ohnuma; N H Dang; C Morimoto
Journal:  Clin Exp Immunol       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 4.330

3.  The anti-inflammatory effects of levocetirizine--are they clinically relevant or just an interesting additional effect?

Authors:  Garry M Walsh
Journal:  Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol       Date:  2009-12-17       Impact factor: 3.406

4.  Levocetirizine inhibits migration of immune cells to lymph nodes and induces treg cells in a murine type I allergic conjunctivitis model.

Authors:  Sihomara García-Zepeda; Elizabet Estrada-Muñiz; Guillermo Elizondo; Luis I Terrazas; Miriam Rodríguez-Sosa; Juan D Quintana-Hau; Rubén Tornero-Montaño; Leopoldo Baiza-Durán; Libia Vega
Journal:  Open Ophthalmol J       Date:  2012-12-14
  4 in total

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