Interrelationship of nickel and cobalt contact sensitization
- 1 August 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Contact Dermatitis
- Vol. 13 (3) , 148-152
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0536.1985.tb02527.x
Abstract
The possible modulating effect of previous nickel sensitization on subsequent cobalt sensitization, and vice versa, was studied in a guinea pig model, using an open epicutanous induction protocol. Challenge tests were made by both topical and systemic routes, Controls included animals sensitized to only one of the metals.Animals sensitized with both metals seemed 10 read more readily in patch testing to either allergen, as compared to mono‐sensitized animals. Systemic challenge with cobalt revealed a significantly (p < 0.05) higher reaction rate (70%) in animals originally sensitized to cobalt and subsequently to nickel, as compared to the reaction rate (20%) in cobalt mono‐sensitized animals. The reverse order of double‐sensitization (nickel first, cobalt subsequently) led to an intermediate cobalt sensitization rate (50%).These experimental data corroborate clinical findings which have indicated a mutual enhancing effect of nickel and cobalt contact sensitization in man, and provide an animal model for studying the underlying immunological processes.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reduced skin threshold to irritation in the presence of allergic contact dermatitis in the guinea pigContact Dermatitis, 1984
- The effect of the guinea pig maximization protocol on the irritant response to deodorized kerosene – the excited skin syndrome*Contact Dermatitis, 1983
- Oral challenge with metal salts. (I). Vesicular patch‐test‐negative hand eczemaContact Dermatitis, 1983
- Quantification of the excited skin syndrome (the “angry back”) Retesting one patch at a timeContact Dermatitis, 1982
- A comparison of three guinea‐pig sensitization procedures for the detection of 19 reported human contact sensitizersContact Dermatitis, 1981
- Cumulative irritancy in the guinea Pig from low grade irritant vehicles and the angry skin syndromeContact Dermatitis, 1980
- Relationship between cobalt and nickel sensitization in femalesContact Dermatitis, 1980
- Nickel cobalt and chromium sensitivity in patients with pompholyx (dyshidrotic eczema)Contact Dermatitis, 1979
- Evaluation and relevance of isolated test reactions to cobaltContact Dermatitis, 1979