A scientific team have identified the cellular defect that makes eczema sufferers more prone to eczema vaccinatum, a severe and potentially fatal reaction to smallpox vaccine.
A husband-wife scientific team from the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology have identified the cellular defect that makes eczema sufferers more prone to eczema vaccinatum, a severe and potentially fatal reaction to the smallpox vaccine.
Doctors Toshiaki and Yuko Kawakami have found that activity levels of Natural Killer (NK) cells, which are disease fighting cells of the immune system, play a pivotal role in the development of eczema vaccinatum in the mice.The researchers found that the activity of the NK cells was significantly lower in the mice that developed eczema vaccinatum than in normal mice that also received the smallpox vaccine.
They say that this knowledge opens the door to one day developing therapies that could potentially boost NK cell activity in eczema sufferers.
"Since atopic dermatitis affects as many as 17 percent of children in the U. S. and since eczema vaccinatum carries a fatality rate of 5-10 percent, therapies that prevent or treat eczema vaccinatum successfully are crucial should the need for mass vaccination against smallpox arise in response to bioterrorism," said Harvard pediatrics professor Dr. Raif S. Geha, of immunology at Boston Children's Hospital and a principal investigator in the NIH funded network investigating eczema vaccinatum.
"The discovery of the Kawakami team, who are participants in the NIH network, is an important step towards this goal," Geha added.
People with active atopic dermatitis (eczema), or who have outgrown it, and those with whom they currently live cannot receive smallpox vaccinations because of the risk of eczema vaccinatum.
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A significant portion of the U.S. population is currently considered to be ineligible for smallpox vaccination.
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Toshiaki Kawakami said: "We are very excited by these findings. Developing a safer smallpox vaccine is the most important thing in this field."
A research paper on the study has been published in the online version of the Journal of Experimental Medicine.
Source-ANI
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