| Literature DB >> 311597 |
C H Hartmann, M Mordelet-Dambrine, M C Santais, H Hamard, L Guillaumat, J L Parrot.
Abstract
The analysis of IgE in aqueous humor yielded an average concentration of 3.4 +/- 0.97 U/ml for 22 cataract patients and 5.5 +/- 3.42 U/ml for five uveitis patients. The IgE level in aqueous humor (IgEa.h.) of the cases examined is most probably, beside hematoocular diffusion of serum IgEs, the result of intra-ocular IgE production. In comparison with (mostly normal) IgEs levels, the IgEa.h. concentration appears relatively elevated, not only with uveitis patients, but also with cataract patients, above all when lenticular opacity is accompanied by other ophthalmic diseases (glaucoma, high myopia, diabetes). This "increase" of IgEa.h. concentration in very probably due to the radioimmunosorbent (RIST) technique employed, the most sensitive method available at the time of the present study. Thus, the calculated IgEa.h. value in the cataractous eyes should be regarded simply as approximate to the normal IgEa.h. concentration. These values are of clinical significance however, since a reference IgEa.h. mean-value is indispensable to the interpretation of pathologically high IgEa.h. levels and ethics do not permit of IgEa.h. determination in healthy eyes. The mean IgEa.h. levels of the delayed-type uveitis and cataract patients examined reveal no significant differences. IgEa.h. determination could make a contribution to the etiological clarification of, for example, immediate-type uveitis cases and intra-ocular parasitosis and serve as an appropriate model to study intra-ocular immunomechanisms.Entities:
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Year: 1978 PMID: 311597 DOI: 10.1007/bf00431166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Albrecht Von Graefes Arch Klin Exp Ophthalmol ISSN: 0065-6100