Abstract
This study was performed to ascertain the role of allergy, as defined by skin testing and histochemical markers, in the pathogenesis of otitis media with effusion (OME). A historical perspective of allergy as it relates to OME is presented. The study included 89 patients: 48 with persistent effusion but no recent acute infection, 25 with purulent OME complicated by a superimposed infection, and 16 control subjects. All 89 patients had persistent effusion for more than 2 months and subsequently required the placement of tympanostomy tubes. Allergy was defined using the radioallergosorbent test (RAST), serum immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels, and skin tests. Allergies were present in 97% of the patients with nonacute OME. The relationship between allergy and OME was corroborated clinically in 89% of patients and was also substantiated by elevated levels of effusion eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) in 87.5% of OME patients. Histologically, polyclonal antibody staining for ECP demonstrated the presence of eosinophils in middle ear mucosal biopsy specimens. This study confirms that OME is a sign of allergic inflammation in the middle ear that is associated with an increase in eosinophils and a concomitant release of ECP into the effusion in individuals with allergy demonstrated by skin testing.

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