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Wednesday » December 12 » 2007
N.S. withdraws lot of mumps vaccine over health fears
Ken Meaney
CanWest News Service
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
A day after Alberta halted its mumps vaccinations over health fears, the Nova
Scotia government has withdrawn one lot of mumps vaccine as a precaution.
Alberta's action came after five patients went into suspected anaphylactic shock
when they got the vaccine. That prompted a warning from Health Canada not to use
several batches of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine while officials
investigate.
Health Canada has advised provincial authorities to temporarily suspend use of
Lot 1529U of the MMR-II vaccine associated with the cases of suspected
anaphylaxis. Those affected were all young adults with a previous history of
allergy. All have recovered after treatment. Health Canada has also advised
health authorities to suspend use of two other lots of MMR vaccine (lots 1528U
and 1680U) that were made with the same materials as Lot 1529U.
Dr. Robert Strang, Nova Scotia's chief public health officer, said Wednesday
Nova Scotia has had no reported cases of anaphylactic shock in response to the
vaccinations and the program there is safe. He said Nova Scotia received no Lot
1529U vaccine, but did receive 4,000 doses of Lot 1528U. None of the doses from
Lot 1528U were used in Nova Scotia.
"We remain certain that our MMR vaccination program in Nova Scotia is safe and
encourage parents to have their infants immunized and for post-secondary
students to be immunized," Strang said. Two people in the Edmonton area and
three near Red Deer, Alta., became anaphylactic after receiving the mumps shot,
leading health officials to suspect something is wrong with the vaccines, or
that young adults may be susceptible to allergic reactions from the shots.
Serious adverse reactions to MMR vaccination are rare. Despite millions of doses
of MMR vaccine administered in Canada in the last 30 years, there have been only
23 reports of anaphylaxis after immunization. Anaphylaxis can cause swelling of
the face, wheezing and shortness of breath. People can also become hypertensive
and collapse.
© CanWest News Service 2007
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http://nobelprize.org/medicine/laureates/1913/richet-lecture.html
Charles Richet – Nobel Lecture
Nobel Lecture, December 11, 1913
Anaphylaxis
It is not without emotion that I address this assembly on the experiments that
have brought me, through the most gracious favour of the Caroline Institute, the
highest reward that a scientist has the right to hope for. I ask your indulgence
in speaking of my own research, as I must do, and in setting out the findings
that have given anaphylaxis a leading place in general pathology over the last
decade.
First I feel I must explain and indeed justify the use of the word itself, for
it may seem somewhat barbarous at first glance. This neologism I invented twelve
years ago on the assumption, which I think is still valid, that a new idea calls
for a new word in the name of scientific precision of language.
Phylaxis, a word seldom used, stands in the Greek for protection. Anaphylaxis
will thus stand for the opposite. Anaphylaxis, from its Greek etymological
source, therefore means that state of an organism in which it is rendered
hypersensitive, instead of being protected.
To make this plain, we will consider the example of a subject that has received
a poison.
Let us suppose the dosage to be moderate and that after a few days the subject
is, or at least appears to be, normal. If, at this point, a further injection is
given of the same dosage of the same poison, what will happen?
There are three possibilities.
The first and simplest is that there has been no change in the organism and that
in receiving the same dosage as one month previously, exactly the same phenomena
will result, in exactly the same conditions. Naturally this is what happens most
of the time. Specialists and doctors work on this assumption when they repeat
the intoxication at one month intervals.
The second possibility is that the subject has become less sensitive. In other
words, the preceding intoxication has produced a certain condition of tolerance
or non-sensitivity. This will mean that a stronger dose is necessary at the
second injection to give the same results. This is the case of (relative)
immunization or, as it is sometimes called, of mithridatism. The most remarkable
case of this tolerance is to be seen when opium or morphine are used. People who
take morphine injections need stronger and stronger doses for the morphine to
take effect. Some unhappy morphine addicts get to the point of standing a dose
of 20 grams, whereas one decigram is dangerous in a normal subject. It has been
known for persons to drink one litre of laudanum per day, while one drop of
laudanum produces already some effect.
These two cases, of unchanged sensitivity or stability, and of diminished
sensitivity or habituation, have been known since long. Now I have shown that
there is a third possibility, frequently to be observed in certain conditions
which I have specified: this is of heightened sensitivity. The first injection,
instead of protecting the organism, renders it more fragile and more
susceptible. This is anaphylaxis.
These are the circumstances under which I first observed this phenomenon. You
will allow me to go into some details on the origins. You will find that it is
by no means the result of profound thought but a simple observation, almost a
fortuitous one; so that my merit has only been in letting myself see the facts
which were plain before me.
In tropical waters, Coelenterata are to be found floating on the surface, also
known as Physalia (Portuguese galleys). The basic structure of these creatures
is a pocket filled with air so that they can float like a bladder. A bucco-anal
cavity is subjoined to this pocket, with very long tentacles which hang in the
water. These feelers sometimes run to two or three meters long and are equipped
with small devices which adhere like sucking cups to objects encountered. Within
each of these innumerable suction-cups is a pin-point which drives into the
foreign body that is being touched. At the same time, this pin-point causes
penetration of a subtle but strong poison, which is contained in the tentacles,
so that contact with a feeler of the Physalia is tantamount to a multiple
injection of poison. On touching a Physalia an acute sensation of pain is felt
immediately, due to the penetration of this liquid venom. This is similar in
relative intensity to a swimmer's mishap when he bumps into a jelly-fish in the
water.
During a cruise on the yacht of Prince Albert of Monaco, the Prince advised me
to study Physalia poison, together with our friends Georges Richard and Paul
Portier. We found that it is easily dissolved in glycerol and that by injecting
this glycerol solution, the symptoms of Physalia poisoning are reproduced.
When I came back to France and had no more Physalia to study, I hit upon the
idea of making a comparative study of the tentacles of the Actinia (Actinia
eqnina, Anemone sulcata) which can be obtained in large quantities, for Actinia
abound on all the rocky shores of Europe.
Now Actinia tentacles, treated with glycerol, give off their poison into the
glycerol and the extract is toxic. I therefore set about finding how toxic it
was, with Portier. This was quite difficult to do, as it is a slowly acting
poison and three or four days must elapse before it can be known if the dose be
fatal or not. I was using a solution of one kilo of glycerol to one kilo of
tentacles. The lethal dose was of the order of 0.1 liquid per kilo live weight
of subject.
But certain of the dogs survived, either because the dose was not strong enough
or for some other reason. At the end of two, three or four weeks, as they seemed
normal, I made use of them for a new experiment.
An unexpected phenomenon arose, which we thought extraordinary. A dog when
injected previously even with the smallest dose, say of 0.005 liquid per kilo,
immediately showed serious symptoms : vomiting, blood diarrhoea, syncope,
unconsciousness, asphyxia and death. This basic experiment was repeated at
various times and by 1902 we were able to state three main factors which are the
corner-stone of the history of anaphylaxis: (1) a subject that had a previous
injection is far more sensitive than a new subject; (2) that the symptoms
characteristic of the second injection, namely swift and total depression of the
nervous system, do not in any way resemble the symptoms characterizing the first
injection; (3) a three or four week period must elapse before the anaphylactic
state results. This is the period of incubation.
Once these first factors in anaphylaxis were well grounded, the field opened
right up, thanks to the skilled and fruitful research of many investigators.
In 1903 Arthus, in Lausanne, showed that a first intravenous injection of serum
on a rabbit causes anaphylaxis, i.e. three weeks after the first injection the
rabbit is hypersensitive to the second injection. The phenomenon of anaphylaxis
was becoming of general application. Instead of applying only to toxins and
toxalbumins, it held good for all proteins, whether toxic at the first injection
or not.
Two years later Rosenau and Anderson, two American physiologists, demonstrated
in a noteworthy piece of work that the phenomenon of anaphylaxis occurs after
every injection of serum, even when the injection is minute, for example of
0.00001 ml which is an infinitely small amount but nevertheless sufficient to
anaphylactize an animal. They quoted examples of anaphylaxis from all organic
liquids: milk, serum, egg, muscle extract. They specified the reaction and
clearly showed that of all the subjects, the guinea-pig appeared the most
sensitive in anaphylactic terms.
In 1907 I conducted an experiment which shed much light on the pathogeny of
anaphylaxis. An anaphylactic state is produced by taking the blood of an
anaphylactized animal and injecting it into a normal animal subject. The
anaphylactogen poison is therefore a chemical substance contained in the blood.
Such are, I think, the main stages through which our knowledge has passed. I
pass now to particular points I wish to stress.
The incubation period varies according to the poison used rather than according
to the type of animal subject. There is however a minimum period of one week (in
the guineapig, following the injection of milk). With mytilin extracted from the
common mussel (Mytilus edulis), the incubation period is a fortnight. With the
dog, using crepitin extract from Hura crepitans, the period is longer, of some
four weeks. With the guinea-pig, following the injection of serum - on an
exhaustive series of experiments - the incubation period is of some eleven days
and the reaction symptoms reach their peak at the fourteenth day, always
allowing for considerable variation according to subject.
But it is a much harder task to state when the anaphylactic period has actually
passed. Most writers incline to the view (and I myself would think them correct
in their view) that the anaphylactic state never passes. In other words, once a
subject has been anaphylactized and consequently modified in his chemical
constitution, then the subject can never go back to his former state. Return to
normal is not possible. Subjects have been known who even after four years from
the date of the first serum injection, were still sensitive to the unleashing
reaction.
Let me add in passing that it is an extraordinary phenomenon that so
insignificant a quantity of poison can modify the organism to the extent that
the succeeding days down long years can not eradicate this indelible
modification. Unfortunately minute researches on just this point are still
lacking. But it certainly looks as though considerable differences will be found
in the duration of anaphylactization.
Anaphylactic symptoms also vary to a great extent, although the differences are
marked rather according to the nature of the experimental animal than according
to the nature of the poison used. It is indeed worthy of note to find that the
phenomena are constant, whatever the poison used.
I have made especial study of anaphylaxis in dogs, which permits of greater
accuracy in specifying symptoms than in experiments with the guinea-pig. In the
dog, four degrees of anaphylaxis may be distinguished, according to intensity.
In the lightest form, the main symptom is prurience or itching. The animal, let
loose, sneezes and gives various shakes of the head as if there was something
inconvenient in his ears. The dog scratches his head and sides with his paws,
sometimes frantically. Sometimes he rubs his muzzle against the ground and rolls
over.
The next stage in anaphylactic intensity is characterized by itching again, but
this time more violent. This is followed almost immediately by various symptoms;
more rapid breathing, lowered arterial pressure, faster heart-beat, vomiting,
blood diarrhoea and rectal tenesmus.
At the third degree, depression of the nervous system is such that the itching
has gone or almost gone. The animal has no strength to vomit, diarrhoea is
marked while the fluid passed from the rectum is often almost wholly blood. The
nervous symptoms often develop so suddenly and violently that there is no time
for colic and diarrhoea. Ataxia follows at once. The animal reels as if drunk,
the pupils are dilated, the eyes haggard and after heart-rending cries, the
animal falls to the ground, urinating and defecating underneath himself,
unconscious, no longer reacting to the excitations and in complete
mind-blindness. Breathing is laboured and agonized. The heart beats are so faint
as to be barely perceptible: blood pressure hardly reaches the one or two
centimetre mercury level. To sum up, all the symptoms point to the central
nervous system being the seat of severe and sudden intoxication. This brutal
assault of the poison on the nervous system has been called anaphylactic shock.
There is a fourth degree of anaphylaxis, it may be said, which is more serious
still: when all the symptoms, instead of passing off, worsen so that within a
quarter or a half hour the subject is dead.
In the dog such death at the onset is rare. In most instances, following the
anaphylactic shock, the dog revives. After fifteen or thirty minutes, he gets to
his feet, staggering a bit, regains feeling and consciousness and is left with
only blood diarrhoea still persisting from the anaphylaxis. Often death takes
place during the night following the injection; but constantly after a period of
apparent recovery.
In the rabbit, according to Arthus, respiration becomes polypneuic. The animal
falls on its side, throws its head back, makes running movements with the legs
and then suddenly breathing stops. Heart failure is systolic and death ensues
within a couple of minutes.
Arthus also observed some interesting local effects of anaphylaxis in the
rabbit. The second injection being given in the same ear as the initial
injection, ulcers and gangrene appear, although there are almost no general
symptoms. This local effect of anaphylaxis is often called the "Arthus
phenomenon".
The guinea-pig is extremely sensitive to anaphylaxis. If the anaphylaxis is
slight, only symptoms of itching, excitation and heightened breathing appear.
Often the animal falls on its side, sometimes in violent convulsions, sometimes
on the contrary paralysed and powerless. In both of these cases, death takes
place fast and it is almost a matter of seconds between the injection and the
final failure of the heart.
Anaphylaxis has been observed in all animals: the horse, the goat, the ox, the
rat, the pigeon, the duck and even recently in frogs.
Anaphylaxis takes place also in human subjects and has caused death in certain
instances. It is indeed probable that sudden death following the bursting of a
hydatid cyst is an anaphylactic phenomenon. Some years back I was in Brazil and
I heard the story of a doctor who had given himself a preventive injection of
anti-plague serum. The next year a new outbreak of plague was feared so he
persuaded his students to have a preventive injection of the same serum. He set
the example by giving himself another one. This was however an unleashing
injection and his body had been affected by the first. The second injection was
fatal and within two hours he was dead.
Now however the effects of anaphylaxis in mankind are very well known. Two
doctors from Vienna, Pirquet and Schick, have studied the matter with the
greatest care. They have described serum-sickness ("Serum-Krankheit") in
children subjected to injections of diphtheria serum and they saw that it was in
most cases an anaphylactic phenomenon. It is only in the rarest cases that the
first injection is productive of immediate reaction. When it comes to the second
injection, an immediate reaction follows for 90% of the cases, that is to say
when the period between the first and second injection is from ten to thirty
days.
The symptoms to be observed are very close to symptoms observed in animal
subjects: urticaria, erythema, pangs of pain, itching and in the worst cases
demi-syncope, with nausea, vomiting, hyperthermia, edema over the whole skin
area and general urticaria.
Thus by comparison of anaphylactic effects in man and the animals, it will be
seen that they are akin. It is as if poison had been produced, which reacts upon
the nervous system, especially on the vaso-motor nerves or the trophic nerves of
the skin.
It is now opportune to examine the substances apt to develop the anaphylactic
state. They can be defined very simply, by using a fairly arbitrary system of
classification, which groups substances in colloids on the one hand and
crystalloids on the other.
Crystalloids are on the whole non-active. I am not aware of any successful
attempt to induce anaphylaxis by one crystallizable salt or by any alkaloid. On
the other hand all the proteins without exception produce anaphylaxis: one has
seen this with all sera, milks, organic extracts whatsoever, all vegetable
extracts, microbial proteinotoxins, yeast cells, dead microbial bodies. It would
be of more interest now to find a protein which does not produce anaphylaxis
than to find one that does.
But what is above all important is to know the degree of specificity of these
injections.
At first sight it looks as if the specificity is pushed very far. For example if
the preparatory injection is of goat's milk, then the unleashing injection will
be much stronger and will have more intensive effects if made from goat's milk
than if made from cow's or sheep's. Again, for the unleashing injection of horse
serum to take maximum effect, the first injection should also be of horse serum.
It is obvious that the animal in this case is still somewhat sensitive to a
second injection with serum from a dog or rabbit, but the effect is far less. It
is thus permitted to conclude that there is specificity, that is to say
necessary identity between the preparatory and the unleashing injection.
I will be coming back to the meaning of this term, specificity. First, I will
mention a curious use to which anaphylaxis has been put in forensic medicine, on
this principle that there is specificity.
Suppose for the sake of example some blood drops of unknown provenance, which
however must be discovered in the name of medical jurisprudence. Let us say, it
has to be established whether the blood is human or of a dog or a pig or an ox.
Guinea-pigs are used; one is injected with human serum, another with dog serum,
another with ox serum, and another with pig serum. Then one month later, the
blood of unknown provenance is made into a water solution. The same small
quantity of the unknown blood is then injected into each of the guinea-pigs in
turn. If one of them shows morbid symptoms and dies, for example the guinea-pig
that had the human-blood serum injection, then we will conclude that the blood
in question was in fact human blood.
I will recount at this point another experiment which was out of the ordinary.
Flesh was taken from the mummified form of a man, three or four thousand years
old. Muscle extract was made from this. The injection of this fluid into
guinea-pigs made them sensitive to muscle serum and to human muscle serum only.
This would show, were it necessary, that the chemical components of the human
body have undergone no great variation in the course of the last four thousand
years.
This series of evidence gives good reason for recognizing the specificity of
anaphylaxis. However there must be no overstatement. Let us note that
guinea-pigs sensitive to cow-milk serum are not altogether non-sensitive to
goat- or sheep-milk serum, although their preparatory injection was only of
cow-milk serum.
Two further series of observations I have made quite recently do lead me to
question the hard and fast rules for specificity in anaphylaxis one is tempted
to lay down. First, when I gave a preparatory injection of crepitin and I
determined one month later the emetic dose (that means the dose causing
vomiting) of apomorphine, I saw that with normal dogs a dose of apomorphine
hydrochloride equal to 0.00275 of the salt per kilogram caused vomiting in 21%
of the dogs, whereas with dogs initially injected with crepitin, for the same
dose of apomorphine hydrochloride, vomiting ensued in 63% of them.
Anaphylactic dogs are thus more sensitive to apomorphine than normal dogs, and
it follows that there exists general anaphylaxis, as apomorphine in no way
resembles crepitin.
Further, the second experiment to be adduced against the specificity of
anaphylaxis I conducted with two kinds of toxalbumin, extracted from the
Actinia, a substance which I named congestin, as its property is to bring on
grave congestion of the circulatory system in the intestines and stomach. Two
congestins may be prepared at some pains: yellow congestin, soluble in a fluid
containing 50% alcohol, and black congestin, completely insoluble in a fluid
containing 25% alcohol. Now I was able to show that black congestin is not
unleashing, but is better as the preparatory injection than the yellow congestin.
This gives us authority for thinking that the sensitizing (or preparatory)
property and the unleashing property belong to allied protein groups, but not
identical ones. Biological chemistry will no doubt unravel these two substances.
In practice the two substances, preparatory and unleashing, are almost always
lined up together, so that we have a near right to pronounce on strict
specificity.
Another experiment of prime importance is this, for it shows the very nature of
the anaphylactic process. In April 1907 I showed that the injection of serum
from an anaphylactized dog induced an anaphylactic state in untreated dogs, as
if this serum contained the toxic substance which activates the unleashing
injection.
With actino-congestin, the experiment is clear-cut. Almost harmless doses cause
death within a matter of hours in dogs that had not been anaphylactized, but had
had injections of serum from anaphylactized animals. This is what is known as
passive anaphylaxis.
At about the same time, in May and June 1907, Gay and Southard in America, and
Otto in Germany, also showed quite clearly that passive anaphylaxis exists. It
has become one of the classic tenets of anaphylaxis.
Another finding, that I call anaphylaxis in vitro, allowed me as it were to
synthesize the poison that is released during the unleashing injection.
The experiment worked best with crepitin. The immediate toxic effect of a
certain dosage of crepitin was first determined, say of 0.004 g. Then serum is
taken from an animal anaphylactized by crepitin, and in this serum is dissolved
0.004 g of crepitin. This injection is harmless, providing the crepitin had been
diluted with water. It is however very offensive when the crepitin is dissolved
in serum from a dog that has been anaphylactized. It must thus be admitted that
by some chemical combination the crepitin in conjunction with the unknown
substance in the anaphylactic serum has given rise to a veritable poison.
The effects of this new poison are extremely strong, as the following experiment
will show. It was carried out on a bitch that had been given an active dose of
crepitin mixed with the anaphylactic serum. "Severe vomiting, diarrhoea, rectal
tenesmus: unable to keep standing, she urinates under herself; the pupils are
dilated, the eyes haggard; complete mind-blindness, near-total failure of
reflexes, deep unconsciousness, breathing dyspneic, heart-beat faint and very
fast, pulse barely perceptible; dead in thirty-six hours."
Thus, the mixture of the antigen with the blood of an animal anaphylactized by
this same antigen, produces a strong violent poison which is different from the
antigen itself.
To evaluate this reaction, we must mention a valuable experiment of Claude
Bernard carried out long ago. Bitter almonds contain two substances: amygdalin
which is harmless and emulsin which is harmless too. Animal subjects survive an
injection of either amygdalin or emulsin. But emulsin is a diastase and has the
property of breaking up amygdalin, liberating hydrocyanic acid, which is one of
the most virulent toxic gases known. Thus if an animal that has been given
amygdalin is then injected with emulsin, hydrocyanic acid will be formed in the
blood stream and death will take place at once. Yet injected separately, neither
the amygdalin nor the emulsin has any effect.
It is just the same with anaphylactic serum and the antigen. Separate, they are
harmless. Together, they are fatal.
A simple hypothesis suggests itself, even though Wolf-Eissner has not yet been
able to accept it. Let us assume the existence of a substance in the
anaphylactized blood, which we will call toxogenin. It is in itself harmless as
animals have it in the blood and seem to enjoy good health. It may moreover be
injected into other animal subjects without harm. But if toxogenin is mixed with
antigen, then a new poison is produced, which has immediate and serious
consequences. This poison, derived as it is from the antigen, I propose to call
apotoxin. The chemical reaction is straightforward: toxogenin + antigen =
apotoxin.
This appears to be a general law of biological chemistry: that bodies that are
non-active and harmless in themselves become harmful and activated when in
reaction one to the other. Trypsin is non-active when it has not been in contact
with enterokinase. The sperm must perforce contact the ovum in order for
fertilization to take place, Hydrochloric acid must contact pepsin, for
digestion, etc. All workers on anaphylaxis have had to assume the existence of
this sensitizing substance that I called toxogenin. Besredka later called it
sensibilisin, while Friedberger called it anaphylatoxin. The name matters
little. The fact is that there exists in anaphylactized blood a substance
harmless in itself but which releases a strong poison when mixed with the
antigen.
I omit the details of the successful experiments undertaken by Besredka on
antianaphylaxis, together with the painstaking work of Friedberger and his
pupils on deviation of the complement. I will only mention the course of my own
original research, for I have no hope in this lecture of covering the whole
field of anaphylaxis research.
It is relevant here to indicate the relationship I have been able to establish
between leucocytosis and anaphylaxis, a relationship that is hard to grasp
without elaborate techniques and prolonged observations. All my experiments have
been conducted on dogs, with the help of my friend P. Lassablière who did the
calculations.
The number of white corpuscles or leucocytes in the normal dog is 100 per
hundredth of a millimeter cubic on average, varying from 70 to 130. In animals,
now, that have been anaphylactized, even after a considerable time-lag of say
six months, when they appear to be completely normal and in perfect health, the
number of leucocytes reaches and often exceeds 200.
An initial injection which makes the body anaphylactic, therefore, induces a
marked leucocytosis and this is the only symptom that can be observed.
With weaker doses of antigen and with antigens that are harmless or practically
so, such as peptone, the anaphylactic leucocytosis does not last as long but is
nevertheless pronounced. A quantity of peptone equal to 0.005 per kilo live
weight will still give leucocytosis and bring about either immunity or
anaphylaxis. There is no reaction more sensitive than that of leucocytosis. By
systematic analysis of this subtle phenomenon it seems clear to me that certain
conclusions may be made which would have been utterly out of the question
otherwise.
I will cite as illustration some experiments which I am still making on the
action of chloroform on dogs. On a dog chloroformed for the first time, the
number of leucocytes in the blood undergoes no modification either under the
anasthaetic or after, whether on the second or the tenth or the twentieth day.
If however a second chloroformization is carried out a month or so after the
first, in conditions as nearly identical with the first as may be permissible,
then on the third or the fourth or the fifth day in particular, severe
leucocytosis will appear, reaching 220 or 250 leucocytes.
What is the explanation of this curious phenomenon? There can be no question of
real anaphylaxis, for anaphylaxis is always severe, immediate and terrible,
whereas in this instance, the leucocytosis only appeared on the third or the
fourth day.
I have necessarily arrived at the following hypothesis. Namely, that the
chloroform works on the hepatic cells and causes the break-up of certain protein
substances in them, which pass thence to the blood stream. If it is the first
time that these proteins have been released to reach the blood, then there is no
leucocytic reaction. If, after an interval of three weeks, a new break-up takes
place in the liver as a result of the second chloroformization, then this
behaves like a second protein injection, the unleashing injection on an
anaphylactized animal.
There does exist then, besides direct anaphylaxis, an indirect anaphylaxis.
about which little is so far known. But it seems that indirect anaphylaxis
greatly widens the scope of anaphylactic action. Anaphylactic phenomena have
been the subject of much medical research. It would take too long even to list.
As I have not myself undertaken work in this respect, I forbear to dwell on it
I cannot however pass over the possible relationship between anaphylaxis and
tuberculin reactions. This topic is highly controversial and undoubtedly worthy
of further studies.
From the start of our research on anaphylaxis, we noticed the analogy existing
between anaphylaxis and sensitivity of tuberculous animals to tuberculin. The
admirable contributions of R. Koch, which has since been borne out by numberless
experiments undertaken by others, showed that a normal animal does not react to
tuberculin, whereas tuberculous animals do react to doses a thousand times
weaker. What is this heightened sensitivity, if not anaphylaxis?
When it came to questions of detail, considerable differences were found to
appear. In fact a first injection of tuberculin does not make normal animals
sensitive to a second injection. The blood of tuberculous animals does not
induce passive anaphylaxis. Lastly, the anaphylactic reaction is on the whole
one of hypothermy, while the tuberculin injection on tuberculous subjects always
causes hyperthermy.
However, I do not believe that these are fundamental objections. At most they
prove that the growth of the Koch bacillus produces preparatory substances which
are not to be found in tuberculin. Tuberculin contains unleashing substances,
but the preparatory substances are lacking, probably because the numerous
chemical changes that must take place before the tuberculin can be extracted
from tuberculous cultures have themselves caused change in the preparatory
substance. I am of the firm belief that in the animal organism infected by the
tubercle bacillus, the infection creates substances that act as preparatory, but
which are not found in tuberculin as we use it. This is not paradoxical, at all.
It may be thought that general application can be made of this anaphylactic
method of diagnosis. Two methods lie open. One, the patient may be given a
subcutaneous injection of specific serum to see if he is sensitive to the
reaction. The other is to take the patient's serum and inject it into
guinea-pigs, seeing after the passage of two or three days if the guinea-pigs
are sensitive to such and such bacterial toxin.
I considered whether this method of diagnosis by anaphylaxis might not be made
use of in cancer. Taking cancer tumours and precipitating by alcohol the aqueous
extract of such tumours, a precipitate results which admits of purification by
being dissolved and precipitated in successive steps. This dry product can then
be dissolved in water and injected into patients suffering from cancer. If
anaphylacto-diagnosis of cancer did really exist, this injection would produce a
certain reaction. This was not the case. Some of my colleagues made the
injection of this product into patients with cancer. The effects of the
injection were absolutely nil.
While on the subject of negative experiments, I wish to say a word on what I
call homogenic anaphylaxis. The aim was to discover if the injection into an
animal of blood from another subject of the same species, provokes a stronger
reaction at the second injection than at the first, always given the same source
for the transfusion in both cases.
Here again the results were absolutely nil. A dog A was injected with 70 gram
per kilo of the blood of another dog B. Not much happened. A month later, the
same dog A that had been treated was given a further injection of 70 gram per
kilo of blood from the same transfusion source dog B. No symptom was observed.
It seems thus there is no such thing as homogenic anaphylaxis, and the blood of
one species of animal injected into an animal of the same kind is harmless both
at the first and at the second injection.
To date, all experiments mentioned above have been carried out by parenteral
injections, that is to say that the substance introduced into the blood was
introduced by other means than the digestion, and namely by means of
subcutaneous, intravenous, intraspinal and peritoneal injections. But there is
also anaphylaxis which comes after ingestion by way of the digestive system.
This is alimentary anaphylaxis and it follows ingestion by the digestive duct.
It was for the first time demonstrated by Rosenau and Anderson in 1906 that
guinea-pigs were sensitive to horse serum after first ingesting horse serum by
way of the digestive tract.
It should be understood that the term alimentary anaphylaxis does not signify
anaphylaxis by alimentary substances but anaphylaxis by the introduction of the
anaphylactizing substance by way of the digestive channels. Alimentary
anaphylaxis is characterized by the antigen, whether alimentary or not, being
introduced into the organism by means of the digestive tube. Introduction by the
rectal duct is not included, as the essential feature of alimentary ingestion is
absent, which is the modification of the antigen by the digestive juices.
Alimentary anaphylaxis has been studied on various hands since Rosenau and
Anderson, but the results are not so far constant nor uniform. I have tried to
tackle the problem from another angle, that is to see under what conditions
substances introduced into the stomach can pass into the blood. I used a reagent
that is extremely sensitive, namely leucocytosis.
A dog is given cooked meat: no leucocytosis results. A dog is given raw meat,
even one fifth in quantity compared with the cooked meat, then in three or four
hours time, leucocytosis results. The most likely and simplest explanation is
that when cooked meat is ingested, all the proteins have become non-soluble and
can not be made soluble except by the action of digestive juices: pepsin,
trypsin and erepsin. The products of the break-up of the protein that are formed
are non-toxic and do not induce the leucocytic reaction. It is therefore not
surprising that cooked meat should be ingested without affecting the leucocytes,
for no soluble protein has been introduced into the stomach, and the only
proteins which can pass it are those that have been modified, transformed and
homogenized by the digestive juices.
Now if muscle serum or raw meat is ingested, then soluble proteins are
introduced into the stomach. The digestive juices have powerful action, but it
is probable that part of the protein escapes and certain particles pass into the
circulation, thus effecting a true antigen injection, which can thus set off the
leucocyte reaction.
It follows that each time soluble protein is introduced by the digestive
channels, anaphylactic reaction may result, as it is equivalent to an antigen
injection.
This may explain away the divergences of opinion among physiologists in respect
of alimentary anaphylaxis, for following the introduction of a protein,
depending on whether it is soluble or not, whether it is absorbed or not,
whether it is resistant to the action of the ferments or not, it will or will
not penetrate into the blood system.
In fact I have been able with crepitin to cause a clear instance of alimentary
anaphylaxis.
I have indicated that there are three methods of alimentary anaphylaxis. Let us
call the alimentary ingestion A, and the parenteral injection P. The following
combinations are possible: (I) A preparatory, A releasing; (2) A preparatory, P
releasing ; (3) P preparatory, A releasing. Even in the first of these three
cases (A + A) where the anaphylaxis is strictly alimentary, for the initial
ingestion as well as the subsequent ingestion, there is no doubt about
anaphylaxis having taken place. When a dog ingests crepitin for the first time,
he never vomits. When he ingests it for the second time, some three weeks later,
he always vomits. This is the anaphylactic protective vomit. In the second case
(A + P), the preparatory ingestion being alimentary and the releasing injection
parenteral, the results are clearer still. In effect the anaphylactic shock is
violent and plainly proves that a small quantity of crepitin must have escaped
the digestive juices at the first ingestion and passed to the blood, as the
lasting leucocytosis to be found in animals that have ingested crepitin also
shows.
I have observed in this connection a remarkable fact: a period of one year
between the initial ingestion and the subsequent parenteral injection. A dog
ingested in June 1911 a strong dose of crepitin and survived. (Whatever the ose,
it is not possible to poison dogs by ingesting crepitin.) After one year had
passed, in June 1912, this dog had a harmless crepitin injection and died within
an hour and a half as if struck by lightning. The death of a dog at this speed
from anaphylactic shock is very rare indeed.
To these experiments, I must add the work of Gideon Wells and Thomas Osborne. In
January 1911, they made a close study of the anaphylactizing and immunizing
action of vegetable proteins.
The general conclusion is as expected but nevertheless necessary to be shown:
(1) through the digestive mucous membranes never passes more than tiny amounts
of colloids, but sometimes it does pass them; (2) these minute amounts are
enough on occasion to cause the anaphylactic state either preparatory or
unleashing; (3) the amounts of colloids that pass into the digestive juices are
weak enough to give immunity rather than anaphylaxis, especially if it be
remembered that most are cases of ingestion repeated and increased at various
intervals: all which conditions favour antianaphylaxis immunity rather than true
anaphylaxis.
These findings in the field of alimentary anaphylaxis are perhaps not without
importance to clinical medicine. It may be that many cases of dyspepsia are
nothing more than light attacks of anaphylaxis. Doctors have long found that
regular diet on strictly uniform lines was to be preferred to all other
regimens. It is as if by the repeated ingestion of one some protein substance
the organism had accustomed itself to it and had immunized itself against this
usual antigen.
No need to go over the more extraordinary aspects of alimentary anaphylaxis that
had hitherto remained unexplained. It has long been known that some people are
sensitive to cheese or to strawberries or to fish or to shellfish or to eggs or
even to milk. Now the symptoms to be seen in such individuals on ingesting such
and such foods are analogous to the effects of anaphylaxis: acute stomach pains,
vomiting, diarrhoea, colic, erythema, urticaria, severe itching and sometimes
cardiac troubles and fever. We know now that these are anaphylactic phenomena;
this has become a pathological commonplace.
We shall conclude by reiterating the various phenomena and attempting to
establish their import in general terms.
In the first place anaphylaxis, like immunization, creates humoral
differentiations between different individuals.
A guinea-pig that is anaphylactized by horse serum will not be identical to
untreated guinea-pigs nor to guinea-pigs anaphylactized by ox or dog serum. This
means that over and above the individual differences due to diverse means of
immunization, there are individual differences due to diverse anaphylactizations.
One has only to think of the innumerable quantity of substances that are
anaphylactizing and the substances that can immunize, and one will conclude that
the chemical or humoral diversity is so to say unlimited with the different
individuals.
To be different from other members of the same species, an animal has only to
receive into his blood a small quantity of alien protein which anaphylactizes
him in a special way, or for a microbe to evolve in his blood which gives him
immunity in a special way. In the course of some years' life span, the same
organism that is unique will accumulate immunities or anaphylaxia that appertain
to it, diversely grouped in diverse subjects until each one of these persons
will differ from all others.
Each one of us, by our chemical make-up, above all by our blood and probably
also by the protoplasm of each cell, is himself and no one else. In other words,
he has a humoral personality. We all know very well what the personality of the
psyche is. The multiplicity and the variety of our memories make each one of us
different from all other human beings. We all have a body of stored impressions
which preclude our being confused with any other specimen of our kind. Nothing
could be clearer than this idea of the personality in terms of psyche which
stands to reason and is valid in all human conscience.
Now, in the light of notions of immunity and of anaphylaxis, we can conceive of
another personality in juxtaposition to the moral personality and that is the
humoral personality, which makes us different from other men by the chemical
make-up of our humours.
This is an entirely new idea. It was thought up to now, perhaps from lack of
after-thought, that with individuals of the same age, race and sex the humors
would no doubt be chemically identical. Well, it is not like that at all. Every
living being, though presenting the strongest resemblances to others of his
species, has his own characteristics so that he is himself and not somebody
else. This means that henceforth study of the physiology of the species is no
longer enough. Another physiology must be taken up, which is very difficult and
barely broached, namely that of the individual.
It may be asked how anaphylaxis fits in to that general law, which admits of no
exceptions, that living organisms exist in an optimum state of protection.
It does indeed seem absurd that an organic disposition should make beings more
fragile, more susceptible to poisons, for in most cases everything in living
beings seems disposed to assure them a greater power of resistance.
But some reflection on the final aim of anaphylaxis will give the answer.
It is in fact important that animal species are of determined chemical entity.
If, following the hazard of ingestion or injection, alien proteins were found in
the cellular juices as part of our humours, then the chemical make-up of beings
would be modified and consequently perverted. Crystalloids dialyse through
membranes and are speedily eliminated. In a few days, even in a few hours, they
are completely gone. Colloids however, that no dialysis can eliminate, do not
disappear once they have penetrated to the blood. They fix on cellules and end
up by being integral to them.
Grave danger would thus face the animal species, were they not nicely balanced
in their hereditary chemical make-up. If heterogenous substances got fixed into
our cellules and definitely intermingled with our humours, that would be the end
of the chemical constitution of each animal species, which is the fruit of slow
evolution down the generations, and all the progress that has been achieved
through selection and heredity would be lost.
It does not matter much that the individual becomes more vulnerable in this
regard. There is something more important than the salvation of the person and
that is integral preservation of the race.
In other words, to formulate the hypothesis in somewhat abstract terms but clear
ones all the same: the life of the individual is less important than the
stability of the species.
Anaphylaxis, perhaps a sorry matter for the individual, is necessary to the
species, often to the detriment of the individual. The individual may perish, it
does not matter. The species must at any time keep its organic integrity intact.
Anaphylaxis defends the species against the peril of adulteration.
We are so constituted that we can never receive other proteins into the blood
than those that have been modified by digestive juices. Every time alien protein
penetrates by effraction, the organism suffers and becomes resistant. This
resistance lies in increased sensitivity, a sort of revolt against the second
parenteral injection which would be fatal. At the first injection, the organism
was taken by surprise and did not resist. At the second injection, the organism
mans its defences and answers by the anaphylactic shock.
Seen in these terms, anaphylaxis is an universal defence mechanism against the
penetration of heterogenous substances in the blood, whence they can not be
eliminated.
From Nobel Lectures, Physiology or Medicine 1901-1921, Elsevier Publishing
Company, Amsterdam, 1967
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