Abstract
ConclusionsRepeated positive histoplasmin skin tests in normal medical students caused false positive reactions in the collodion agglutination test (57.1%) and in the complement-fixation test with histoplasma yeast phase antigen (78.6%) or with histoplasmin as antigen (85.7%). The response was relatively transient in the former 2 tests, and negative titers were usually restored by 21 weeks after the last skin test. However, positive results were noted as late as 21, 25 and 39 weeks in complement-fixation tests employing histoplasmin as antigen. A transient response was observed in complement-fixation studies with cross-reacting yeast phase biastomyces antigens (57.1%), but no sera reacted in the same test with coccidiodin antigen. A single positive skin test and repeated negative skin tests did not alter serologic results. Thus, repeated histoplasmin skin testing of skin-test positive persons may invalidate complement-fixation data for long periods with histoplasmin as antigen, and for much shorter period...
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More From: Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)
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