I T HAD been observed for some time t,hat many patients have seasonal exacerbations of vasomotor rhinitis and asthma which occur out of, and also during, the regular pollen seasons. In a normal winter, our area is covered with snow from about December 26 to February 15. With the onset of the February thaw, certain patients developed symptoms of respiratory allergy which occurred occasionally, or would be almost constant until the following winter snows, Others had symptoms perennially. Testing with the usual tree, grass, and weed pollen extracts, some of these patients gave negative skin reactions, They may or may not have given positive house dust and inhalant reactions. The winters of the past four years in New Jersey have had very little snow, and the symptoms presented by these patients took on a perennial phase. During the winter of 1947 to 1948, when the ground was covered by snow from December 26 until February 15, all symptoms disappeared in this group of patients, only to return with the thaw of mid-February. In an effort to discover any new causative air-borne agents to account for the a,bove phenomena, we, under the auspices of the New Jersey Allergy Society, and with the aid of the Department of Plant Pathology of the School of Agriculture, Rutgers University, started a survey of air and house dust. A Wells Air Centrifuge was used to collect twice weekly samples of air into sterile water. A fixed amount of air was run through the machine, and the resultant solution was then plated on Petri dishes in serial dilutions. By this method it was found that the slower growing organisms were not lost, that is, overgrown by the faster growing ones. At the same time, twenty-four hour air slides were made with other centrifuges, directly onto a celluloid strip. These slides were used to correlate the results of the air cultures. On these slides we found fungus spores which could not be cultured, such as smuts, rusts, mushroom, mildews, and puffballs. These spores were identified by going to nature; field trips were made, and trees, leaves, grass, forage plants, cereal grasses, rot,ted wood, etc., were examined in order to determine the source of the fungi. House dust samples were obtained using a special vacuum cleaner which could be cleaned and sterilized between uses. Dusts were collected only from mattresses and overstuffed furniture. This dust was plated on Petri dishes, in dilutions of I.-20, l-40, l-60, I.-80, a total of 2.041 grams of house dust hnv-
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