Depressed delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity in alcoholic hepatitis |
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Authors: | Dr Ned Snyder MD Joel Bessoff MD John M Dwyer MD PhD Harold O Conn MD |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Medicine, West Haven V.A. Hospital, West Haven, Connecticut;(2) Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut;(3) Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology, University of Texas Medical Branch, 77550 Galveston, Texas |
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Abstract: | Delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity was studied in 10 patients with severe alcoholic hepatitis, 9 patients with either inactive alcoholic cirrhosis or alcoholic fatty liver, and 10 age-matched controls. The mean response of the alcoholic hepatitis group was significantly less compared to controls for SK-SD (P<0.001), mumps (P<0.001), trichophyton (P<0.025), andCandida albicans (P<0.025). Upon clinical recovery, the response of the 6 surviving patients with alcoholic hepatitis was similar to controls for 4 of the 5 antigens tested, and the improvements in response to SK-SD andCandida albicans were significant (P<0.02 and P<0.05). The mean percentage and absolute numbers of thymus-derived lymphocytes were significantly less in the alcoholic hepatitis group compared with controls. Both the alcoholic hepatitis patients and patients with less advanced alcoholic liver disease had a diminished response to concanavalin A and phytohemagglutinin. This study demonstrates a reversible depression of delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity in alcoholic hepatitis. Several mechanisms may help account for this finding. We recommend that skin tests in patients with alcoholic hepatitis be interpreted with this phenomenon in mind.This paper was presented at the 27th Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease, Chicago, Illinois, November 5, 1976. |
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