In this study, several findings suggesting aberrant immunologic activation were detected in chronic urticaria patients. Inflammation in the gastrointestinal tract, e.g. caused by H. pylori infection, may have an important role in the etiology of chronic urticaria.
Our findings suggest that H. pylori gastritis leads to increased IgE production. However, we could not show a significant difference in IgE staining between H. pylori-infected and non-infected patients with CU.
Background: An association between Helicobacter pylori and chronic urticaria has been suspected previously. An IgE-mediated pathway might be a possible link between H. pylori infection and chronic urticaria, and therefore we wanted to prepare an optimal H. pylori antigen to detect H. pylori-specific IgE antibodies in chronic urticaria patients. Methods:H. pylori antigen extracts were prepared in different ways to find the optimal antigen extract to be used in the assays. Immunoblotting was used to detect IgE-binding bands. The results were applied in an H. pylori RAST assay for specific H. pylori IgE antibodies in patient sera. Results: In immunoblotting, the largest number of IgE-stained bands were visualized in the washing fluids and sonicated extracts, while strong heating and denaturing treatments destroyed the epitopes for IgE binding, suggesting that they belonged to the flagellar structures of H. pylori. However, in H. pylori-specific RAST analysis, specific IgE was found only in 1 of 25 H. pylori-infected patients. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that although IgE-binding epitopes were found in H. pylori, H. pylori-specific IgE antibodies are not common in chronic urticaria, and the clinical significance of the IgE response is unclear.
The aetiology of lichen planus is unknown, but it is often connected with infections. In recent years peptic ulcer disease has also been closely linked with an infectious agent, Helicobacter pylori. A case-control study was conducted in 78 patients with lichen planus to find out a previous history of peptic ulcer disease, using a questionnaire and a medical record review. Patients were also asked about family history in first- and second-degree relatives. Fifty-seven patients with other skin diseases were interviewed as controls. The prevalence of H. pylori infection in patients with lichen planus was compared to that of 39 patients with other skin diseases and to the overall prevalence rates of H. pylori infection in Finland. Our findings are consistent with an approximately three-fold increased risk of peptic ulcer in patients with chronic/repeating lichen planus, when compared to the control patients (p = 0.04) and also to the overall peptic ulcer prevalence rates in Finland. Forty-one percent of the patients with chronic/repeating lichen planus had a first- or second-degree family member with a peptic ulcer, while the corresponding rate in the control group was only 12% (p=0.003). The prevalence of H. pylori infection in patients with chronic/repeating lichen planus and transient lichen planus was not significantly different from that in patients with other skin diseases.
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