Sheffer A L, Tong A K, Murphy G F, Lewis R A, McFadden E R, Austen K F
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 1985 Apr;75(4):479-84. doi: 10.1016/s0091-6749(85)80021-x.
Exercise-induced anaphylaxis (EIA) is a unique and an increasingly recognized syndrome consisting of premonitory symptoms and signs of generalized body warmth, pruritus, and erythema, which progresses on continued exertion to confluent urticaria, laryngeal edema with stridor or hoarseness, and gastrointestinal colic and frequently culminates in vascular collapse. Previous studies of five individuals with this condition have demonstrated significant elevations of serum histamine concurrent with the early clinical manifestations after experimental exercise. To assess relevant morphologic alterations in the skin of these patients, cutaneous mast cells were examined by light and transmission electron microscopy before and during the initial erythema elicited by exertion. The marked alterations observed in mast cells immediately after exercise consisted of (1) loss of electron density and internal substructure of granules, (2) fusion of granule membranes with those of adjacent granules and with mast cell membranes creating conduits to the extracellular space, and (3) an apparent decrease in the number of intact granules per cell. Biopsy specimens obtained before exercise from patients with EIA and from two normal individuals who served as control subjects were identical, and the control subjects had normal mast cell morphology after exercise. Serum histamine levels were significantly elevated in patients with EIA after exercise at the time of biopsy, whereas control subjects had normal levels. These observations provide evidence that EIA is a distinct form of physical allergy associated with mast cell degranulation similar in morphology to that of human pulmonary mast cell IgE-Fc-dependent activation secretion. Characterization of this disorder is important because its prevalence may be underestimated, and its clinical consequences, which may include some morbidity, are not fully known.
运动诱发性过敏反应(EIA)是一种独特且日益被认识的综合征,其包括全身发热、瘙痒和红斑等先兆症状和体征,在持续运动过程中会进展为融合性荨麻疹、伴有喘鸣或声音嘶哑的喉水肿以及胃肠绞痛,且常常最终导致血管性虚脱。先前对五名患有这种病症的个体的研究表明,在实验性运动后的早期临床表现出现时,血清组胺显著升高。为了评估这些患者皮肤中的相关形态学改变,在运动诱发的初始红斑出现之前和期间,通过光学显微镜和透射电子显微镜对皮肤肥大细胞进行了检查。运动后立即在肥大细胞中观察到的明显改变包括:(1)颗粒的电子密度和内部亚结构丧失;(2)颗粒膜与相邻颗粒的膜以及肥大细胞膜融合,形成通向细胞外空间的管道;(3)每个细胞中完整颗粒的数量明显减少。从EIA患者以及两名作为对照受试者的正常个体在运动前获取的活检标本是相同的,并且对照受试者在运动后肥大细胞形态正常。在活检时,EIA患者运动后血清组胺水平显著升高,而对照受试者的水平正常。这些观察结果提供了证据,表明EIA是一种与肥大细胞脱颗粒相关的独特形式的物理性过敏,其形态与人类肺肥大细胞IgE - Fc依赖性活化分泌相似。对这种病症的特征描述很重要,因为其患病率可能被低估,并且其临床后果(可能包括一些发病率)尚不完全清楚。