Gawkrodger D J, Lewis F M, Shah M
Department of Dermatology, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, SHeffield, UK.
J Am Acad Dermatol. 2000 Jul;43(1 Pt 1):31-6. doi: 10.1067/mjd.2000.107235.
Many patients who give a history of a dermatitis reaction to jewelry or metal contact with skin are negative to metals on standard patch testing. Some may be showing false-negative reactions.
Our purpose was to determine whether patients with a history of jewelry reactions but whose standard patch tests were negative have a false-negative reaction or are allergic to metals other than nickel, cobalt, or chromium.
Four hundred forty-nine patients were studied who gave a history of reacting to jewelry or metal. Of these, 210 were tested to the metals in the European standard series (ie, nickel, cobalt, and chromate), and 239 were tested to the metals in the standard series and to an extended metal series of palladium, gold, platinum, a second nickel salt, and a nickel/cobalt mixture. These were compared with 752 patients who did not give a history of jewelry or metal reactions, of which 50, besides the standard series, were also treated with the additional metal series.
A higher proportion of jewelry-reactive patients tested with the extended series reacted to nickel (and to other metals) than those who were tested only with the European standard series: (61% vs 38%; P <.0001 ). The use of the extended series showed that palladium allergy was common, present in 34% of nickel-allergic patients, but it always occurred with nickel sensitivity. Gold allergy coexisted with nickel sensitivity in 10% of cases. Testing simultaneously with separate patches containing 5% nickel sulfate and 5% nickel chloride showed a concordance of 71% in identified nickel-sensitive patients. Nickel sulfate was more likely than nickel chloride to detect nickel sensitivity. The use of a combined preparation of 2.5% nickel sulfate and 0.5% cobalt chloride in petrolatum revealed only 3 jewelry-reactive patients who were negative to other metals. There was a slightly higher proportion of atopic patients in the patch test-negative jewelry reactors group than in the positive group; however, the difference was not significant and it was not sufficient to account for the negative findings.
Some jewelry reactors who had negative patch tests are likely to be subclinically allergic to nickel. We suggest that the higher number of antigens, or perhaps the larger nickel load, in the extended metal series, resulted in a larger proportion of patients reacting. To better demonstrate nickel allergy in jewelry reactors, patients should be patch tested to a metal series that contains palladium and gold salts and perhaps a second nickel patch because these may reveal the presence of nickel sensitivity when standard patch tests would otherwise have been negative.
许多有首饰皮炎反应史或金属接触皮肤后皮炎反应史的患者,在标准斑贴试验中对金属呈阴性反应。其中一些可能出现假阴性反应。
我们的目的是确定有首饰反应史但标准斑贴试验为阴性的患者是出现假阴性反应,还是对镍、钴或铬以外的金属过敏。
对449例有首饰或金属反应史的患者进行了研究。其中,210例接受了欧洲标准系列金属(即镍、钴和铬酸盐)的检测,239例接受了标准系列金属以及钯、金、铂、第二种镍盐和镍/钴混合物的扩展金属系列的检测。将这些患者与752例无首饰或金属反应史的患者进行比较,其中50例除标准系列外,还接受了额外金属系列的检测。
与仅接受欧洲标准系列检测的患者相比,接受扩展系列检测的首饰反应性患者中,对镍(以及其他金属)呈阳性反应的比例更高:(61%对38%;P<.0001)。扩展系列检测显示,钯过敏很常见,在34%的镍过敏患者中存在,但总是与镍敏感性同时出现。10%的病例中,金过敏与镍敏感性共存。对分别含有5%硫酸镍和5%氯化镍的斑贴同时进行检测,在已确定的镍敏感患者中,一致性为71%。硫酸镍比氯化镍更有可能检测出镍敏感性。在凡士林制剂中使用2.5%硫酸镍和0.5%氯化钴的联合制剂,仅发现3例对其他金属呈阴性反应的首饰反应性患者。斑贴试验阴性的首饰反应者组中特应性患者的比例略高于阳性组;然而,差异不显著,不足以解释阴性结果。
一些斑贴试验阴性的首饰反应者可能对镍存在亚临床过敏。我们认为,扩展金属系列中抗原数量较多,或者可能是镍负荷较大,导致有更多比例的患者出现反应。为了更好地证明首饰反应者中的镍过敏情况,应对患者进行包含钯盐和金盐的金属系列斑贴试验,或许还应进行第二次镍斑贴试验,因为当标准斑贴试验原本为阴性时,这些试验可能会揭示镍敏感性的存在。