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2003
DOI: 10.1159/000078688
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Is There Evidence that Linalool Causes Allergic Contact Dermatitis?

Abstract: The fragrance material linalool has been cited as a moderately frequent cause of allergic contact dermatitis. The literature shows that when the underlying clinical and experimental data are analyzed, a clear cause-effect relationship has infrequently or rarely been established. On the basis of the generally weak sensitizing potential of this substance coupled with its generally low exposure conditions, the prevalence of clinical cases would not be expected to be particularly high. This is not to say that lina… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…However, several of those may be declared on a single product and not all are associated with the same likelihood of causing or eliciting reactions in consumers. [13–22] In regions where labelling of individual fragrance ingredients is not in place, this identification may not be possible.…”
Section: Identifying the Ingredient(s) Within A Fragrance Compound Rementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, several of those may be declared on a single product and not all are associated with the same likelihood of causing or eliciting reactions in consumers. [13–22] In regions where labelling of individual fragrance ingredients is not in place, this identification may not be possible.…”
Section: Identifying the Ingredient(s) Within A Fragrance Compound Rementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The accompanying papers on amylcinnamic aldehyde [Hostynek and Maibach, submitted a], anisyl alcohol [Hostynek and Maibach, 2003a], citronellol [Hostynek and Maibach, submitted b], geraniol [Hostynek and Maibach, submitted c], linalool [Hostynek and Maibach, 2003b], ·-isomethylionone [Hostynek and Maibach, submitted d] show that when the underlying clinical and experimental data are analyzed according to the criteria outlined above, a clear cause-effect relationship has infrequently or rarely been established, nor would one be necessarily expected on the basis of the generally weak sensitizing potential of these substances coupled with reasonably low exposure conditions. This is not to say that some of these substances are frequent inducers of type IV allergy in members of the public.…”
Section: Conclusion Of the Studies On Six Fragrance Allergensmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach has already been used to examine four other substances that have also been cited as frequent causes of contact dermatitis: ␣ -iso-methylionone [5] , anisyl alcohol [6] , linalool [7] and amylcinnamic aldehyde [8] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%