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      Model for Studying Anti- Allergic Drugs for Allergic Conjunctivitis in Animals

      research-article
      * , ,
      Open Medicine
      De Gruyter
      Allergic conjunctivitis, Anti-allergic drugs, Histamine, Substance P

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          Abstract

          Allergic conjunctivitis (AC), which is characterized by ocular itching, hyperemia, and edema, deteriorates quality of life. In this study, effects of anti-allergic drugs were evaluated by assessing eye-scratching behavior, the number of eosinophils in conjunctiva epithelial tissues, and concentrations of chemical mediators in the tears of the guinea pig model of ovalbumin (OA)-induced AC.

          Methodology

          On day 0, 3-week-old guinea pigs were sensitized by OA subconjunctival injections. On days 15, 17, and 19, OA solution was administered. Anti-allergic eye drops were administered 5 and 15 min before the final OA challenge on day 19. Scratching behavior within 1 h after OA exposure was studied. Eosinophils in the conjunctiva were stained with Giemsa reagent. Histamine and substance P (SP) concentrations in tears were measured using ELISA.

          Results

          Subconjunctivally injected guinea pigs were observed for clinical symptoms. Scratching responses significantly reduced with ketotifen or olopatadine treatment. Eosinophil numbers reduced in animals treated with ketotifen, levocabastine, or tranilast. Histamine and/or SP concentrations in tears were inhibited by some of these anti-allergic drugs.

          Conclusions

          It is important to assess the anti-allergic AC drugs objectively because there are several of these drugs currently available. This model allows for an objective evaluation of anti-allergic drugs for AC.

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          Most cited references28

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          Allergic conjunctivitis: update on pathophysiology and prospects for future treatment.

          Allergic conjunctivitis is in actuality a group of diseases affecting the ocular surface and is usually associated with type 1 hypersensitivity reactions. Two acute disorders, seasonal allergic conjunctivitis and perennial allergic conjunctivitis, exist, as do 3 chronic diseases, vernal keratoconjunctivitis, atopic keratoconjunctivitis, and giant papillary conjunctivitis. The ocular surface inflammation (usually mast cell driven) results in itching, tearing, lid and conjunctival edema-redness, and photophobia during the acute phase and can lead to a classic late-phase response (with associated eosinophilia and neutrophilia) in a subset of individuals. As is the case in other allergic diseases, a chronic disease can also develop, accompanied by remodeling of the ocular surface tissues. In severe cases the patient experiences extreme discomfort and sustains damage to the ocular surface. For such cases, there is no highly effective and safe treatment regimen. Topical administration of corticosteroids is used in severe cases but is associated with an increased risk for the development of cataracts and glaucoma. Thus there is a worldwide search for new biotargets for the treatment of these diseases. Here we provide a brief update of the clinical symptoms associated with these diseases, the rationale for disease classification, recent advances in our understanding of the pathogenesis of the diseases, and an update on both preclinical and clinical advances toward refined therapies for these diseases.
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            Scratching behavior induced by pruritogenic but not algesiogenic agents in mice.

            We compared the behavioral effects of treatment with pruritogenic and algesiogenic agents in mice. The animals were given subcutaneous injections of pruritogenic agents, compound 48/80 (3-100 micrograms), substance P (10-300 micrograms) and histamine (3-300 micrograms), and algesiogenic agents, capsaicin (30 and 100 micrograms) and dilute formalin (5 mg of formaldehyde), into the rostral back, and scratching of the injected site by the hind paws was counted. Compound 48/80 and substance P dose dependently elicited the scratching behavior, but histamine, capsaicin and dilute formalin were without significant effects at the doses examined. These results suggest that compound 48/80- and substance P-induced scratching of the injected site is due to itch, but not to pain. The data did not provide support for the idea that histamine produces itch in the mouse.
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              • Article: not found

              Epidemiology of childhood asthma.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Open Med (Wars)
                Open Med (Wars)
                med
                med
                Open Medicine
                De Gruyter
                2391-5463
                1 August 2017
                2017
                : 12
                : 231-238
                Affiliations
                deptFaculty of Pharmacy , universityKeio University , 1-5-30 Shibakoen, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-8512, 105-8512, Japan
                deptLaboratory of Clinical Pharmacology , universityYokohama University of Pharmacy , Yokohama, Kanagawa, 245-0066, Japan
                deptFaculty of Pharmacy , universityKeio University , Minato-ku, Tokyo 105-8512, Japan
                Author notes
                [* ] Tel/Fax: +81-3-5400-2689 nakazawa-ys@ 123456pha.keio.ac.jp
                Article
                med-2017-0034
                10.1515/med-2017-0034
                5545756
                d16ece4b-86c4-40a7-99cd-3ad76b54b97e
                © 2017 Yosuke Nakazawa et al.

                This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.

                History
                : 2 April 2017
                : 9 June 2017
                Page count
                Pages: 8
                Categories
                Regular Article

                allergic conjunctivitis,anti-allergic drugs,histamine,substance p

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