The purposes of this study were to clarify whether damage of the nasal epithelium exists in patients with nasal allergy, and how the morphology of the epithelium changes after topical allergen challenge. Electron microscopy revealed 2 characteristic features in the nasal epithelium of patients with perennial nasal allergy--an increase in the number of epithelial cells with cytoplasmic vacuoles, and markedly widened intercellular spaces--although these changes were unclear under light microscopy. The density of vacuolated cells significantly increased 24 hours after allergen challenge. Further, the number of eosinophils that were associated with vacuolated cells was significantly higher in patients with nasal allergy than in controls. These morphological changes, thus, were considered to be types of damage to the nasal epithelium associated with nasal allergy. Such changes may be among the causes of nasal hyperreactivity, which is an important feature of nasal allergy.
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