Summary
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1.
Ulcerative colitis is frequently due to food allergy—in at least sixty-six per cent of cases.
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2.
The resemblance between the mucosal lesions of ulcerative colitis and allergic reactions in the skin is quite obvious.
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3.
The pathological findings in early ulcerative colitis are identical with those demonstrated in allergy experiments in humans and animals. Their progression would produce the severe, later lesions.
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4.
The symptoms of ulcerative colitis are easily explainable on an allergic basis.
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5.
Proctoscopic and roentgenological examinations can be used to demonstrate the effect of allergenic foods and the improvement on their withdrawal from the diet.
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6.
Treatment based on allergic considerations has produced results which are better than those based entirely on an infective etiology.
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References
Andresen, A. F. R.:Med. J. and Record, cxxll, No. 5, pp. 271–275, Sept. 2, 1925.
Andresen, A. F. R. and D’Albora, J. B.:Med. Times and Long Island Med. J., Oct., 1933.
Gray, I. and Walzer, M.:J. Dig. Dis. and Nutrit., 14, No. 11, Jan., 1938.
Walzer, M., Gray, I. and Harten, M.:Ann. Int. Med., Vol. 13, No. 11, May, 1940.
Walzer, M., Gray, I., Straus, H. W. and Livingston, S.:J. Immunol., xxxiv, 91, 1938.
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From the Gastro-Enterological Service of Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.
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Andresen, A.P.R. Ulcerative colitis — an allergic phenomenon. Jour. D. D. 9, 91–98 (1942). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02996977
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02996977