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  Vol. 258 No. 20, November 27, 1987 TABLE OF CONTENTS
  JAMA
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  PRIMER ON ALLERGIC AND IMMUNOLOGIC DISEASES-SECOND EDITION
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Immunotherapy With Allergens

Peter S. Creticos, MD; Philip S. Norman, MD

JAMA. 1987;258(20):2874-2880.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

IMMUNOTHERAPY is the art of administering increasing doses of a specific extract comprising allergens to which the sensitive (atopic) individual would respond with allergic symptoms on natural environmental exposure in an attempt to alter that patient's immunologic response and thereby ameliorate the allergic patient's typical symptoms.

Immunotherapy has its roots in the early immunization work carried out by Pasteur, Jenner, and others that led to the development of highly effective vaccines that have virtually eradicated a wide variety of diseases such as smallpox and polio. As practiced for the treatment of allergic diseases, it is based on the work of two English physicians, Noon and Freeman,1,2 who in 1911 attempted to immunize grass "hayfever" sufferers with serial injections of grass-pollen extract. Although in their opinion the mechanism of action was that of an "antitoxin" produced against a "pollen toxin," their studies established that significant clinical improvement correlated with changes . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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