Effect of C′1 esterase on vascular permeability in man: studies in normal and complement-deficient individuals and in patients with hereditary angioneurotic edema
Open Access
- 1 March 1968
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 47 (3), 604-611
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci105756
Abstract
When purified human C'1 esterase is injected intradermally in man, increased vascular permeability results. This effect is not blocked by soybean trypsin inhibitor and is not abolished by pretreatment with the antihistamine, pyribenzamine, or by compound 48/80. Thus, the effect is not due to the release of endogenous histamine. The decreased permeability response of individuals with a specific hereditary deficiency of C'2 is evidence for the complement-dependent nature of this reaction. The apparently normal response to intradermal C'1 esterase developed by individuals with an acquired specific deficiency of C'3 suggests that the vasoactive substance may be derived from one of the early reacting complement components. Characteristic attacks of angioedema have been provoked by the intradermal injection of human C'1 esterase in two individuals with hereditary angioneurotic edema. Patients with hereditary angioneurotic edema are unresponsive to intradermal injections of C'1 esterase immediately after attacks.This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Studies of the In Vivo Behavior of Human C′3 in Normal Subjects and Patients*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1967
- COMPLEMENT AS A MEDIATOR OF INFLAMMATIONThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1967
- Anaphylatoxin in Its Relation to the Complement SystemScience, 1967
- Hereditary Deficiency of the Second Component of Complement (C′2) in Man: Further Observations on a Second KindredThe Journal of Immunology, 1967
- A new type of inherited serum albumin anomaly.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1966
- HEREDITARY ANGIONEUROTIC EDEMA: A CLINICAL SURVEYPediatrics, 1966
- Hereditary deficiency of the second component of complement (C'2) in man.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1966
- ENZYME-LIKE GLOBULINS FROM SERUM REPRODUCING THE VASCULAR PHENOMENA OF INFLAMMATION .1. AN ACTIVABLE PERMEABILITY FACTOR AND ITS INHIBITOR IN GUINEA-PIG SERUM1955
- Susceptibility of the Guinea Pig to Pharmacological Factors from its Own SerumNature, 1953
- COMPOUND 48/80: A POTENT HISTAMINE LIBERATORBritish Journal of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy, 1951