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UVEAL PIGMENTHYPERSENSITIVITY AND THERAPEUSIS
ALAN C. WOODS, M.D.;
MILTON F. LITTLE, M.D.
Arch Ophthal. 1933;9(2):200-226.
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| Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings. |
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In 1925, one of us (Dr. Woods1) reported a summary of experimental work previously done in the investigation of Elschnig's allergic theory of sympathetic ophthalmia and the occurrence of a hypersensitivity to uveal pigment which commonly appeared in this disease. The results of treatment with pigment, the principle of which was desensitization with an organ-specific ocular substance in patients in whom a specific hypersensitivity had been demonstrated, were likewise reported. At this time the opinion was expressed that, while there was an apparently definite allergic phase to sympathetic ophthalmia, yet this did not appear to be the only phase of the disease, and it was quite probable that other factors entered into the problem.
Since the publication of this report, other authors have reported on the allergic phase of sympathetic ophthalmia ; much other interesting experimental work has been done, and our own experience with pigment hypersensitivity
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Author Affiliations
BALTIMORE
From the Wilmer Ophthalmological Institute of the Johns Hopkins University and Medical School.
Footnotes
Read before the Section on Ophthalmology at the Eighty-Third Annual Session of the American Medical Association, New Orleans, May 12, 1932.
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