key: cord-0770751-thi2yeel authors: Malm, Lars title: Reduced ability to produce reflex‐evoked neurogenic inflammation, a sign of decreased defense against COVID‐19 infection? date: 2021-10-07 journal: Skin Res Technol DOI: 10.1111/srt.13089 sha: a41784e884ec636b571baaa32099cd0426f8d5cc doc_id: 770751 cord_uid: thi2yeel BACKGROUND: A histamine skin prick test (SPT) generally evokes a wheal and a flare. The present study was initiated by an observation that histamine did not evoke a flare around a wheal in the skin of an 86‐year‐old man. Could that be of relevance to the findings that old men are prone to a more severe COVD‐19 infection with a higher mortality than young ones? MATERIALS AND METHODS: Histamine SPT was performed on the forearm of six old men, all above the age of 80. The skin reactions were photographed from above and from the side. The photographs taken from above were treated in a computer with LYYN, a program that increases color differences. With the help of ImageJ (NIH), the size relation between flare and wheal was calculated. On the photographs, taken as side views, areas, heights, and diameters of wheals were measured. Controls consisted of three groups of younger people. RESULTS: Among the old men, no or only a small flare was seen. All the controls had prominent flares. Histamine SPT evoked small wheals in the group of old men as compared to young men. CONCLUSION: Reduced neurogenic inflammation evoked by histamine from mast cells in blood and tissue may reduce the defense against COVID‐19 infection. It is well known that mast cells evoke edema in the defense against allergens. In addition, mast cells can promote resistance against viral, bacterial, and fungal infections, well described in a recent review. 1 In the search for mechanisms in COVID-19 infections, mast cells have gained increasing interest. 2 A rapid and large edema is suggested to be a sign of a more effective defense of microbes than a late appearing and small one. Histamine die from COVID-19 infection. 4 Men are about 60% more likely to be severely ill or to die from the complications of Covid-19 than women. 5 Six men, 81-89 years old (mean age 85), took part in the study. They all considered themselves healthy. However, two men took an ACE-inhibitor for hypertension, one man an ACE-inhibitor and a ßadrenoceptor antagonist for cardiopathy, and a fourth man a statin for high cholesterol. Histamine SPT (histamine dihydrochloride solution, 10 mg ml −1 , Soluprick®, ALK-Abelló A/S) was set on the volar side of the forearm, with a generally used technique. 6 Each subject received two SPTs, the second one after 40 min and with a distance of 10 cm between the two SPTs. To document the findings, photographs were taken of the skin reactions and transferred to an iMac OS X. After the first SPT, photographs were taken from the side every second minute for 30 min. After the second SPT, photographs were taken from above every second minute for 14 min. On the 15th min, a cast of the histamine wheal was taken with a fast-stiffening material (ALGINoplast®, Heraeus Kultzer GmbH). That cast was later converted to a positive cast of plaster of Paris. Photographs from the old individuals were compared to photographs taken in a previous study of two groups of healthy subjects, F I G U R E 1 Color-increased photographs of skin reactions 14 min after a histamine SPT of six old men and one young student together with one of the original photographs are shown. Four of the old men had no flare. The fifth man had a flare and a wheal of equal size. For the sixth old man, the area of the flare was eight times the area of the wheal. The young student had a flare 14 times larger than the wheal histamine skin prick tested in the same way. 7 In that study, LYYN, a computer technique that increases color difference of photographs, was used. Relations between the size of flares and the size of wheals of LYYN-treated photographs of the old men were compared to those of the first group from the previous study. That group consisted of six young medical students, three men and three women (mean age 26 years). In the article of that study, only changes of the brightness of the wheals were described. Mean values and SD of means are given. p-values of less than 0.05 were considered significant. T-test was used for comparisons between the groups. Ethical approval was obtained by the Ethics Review Authority, Sweden (Number 2020-06778). All six subjects gave written consent to participate in the study. Four of the old subjects had no flare around the wheal. The fifth one had a flare equal to the size of the wheal and the sixth one a flare eight times larger than the wheal. One original photograph from the 14th min after the SPT and six LYYN-treated ones of the old subjects together with an LYYN-treated photograph of a young student are shown in Figure 1 . In six men, 81-89 years old, subjected to histamine SPT on the forearm, the flares were absent or small around the wheals in contrast to what was seen in young subjects. There are few reports on similar results. In one study, 365 subjects were histamine skin prick tested. The authors wrote that "all subjects had a flare, but in some older than 70 years, the flare reaction was small." 9 In another study, substance P was injected into the forearm of diabetics and healthy controls. A smaller flare was found with increasing age in both diabetic patients and controls. 10 Not only old people but also diabetic patients have an increased mortality in COVID-19 infections. 11 Thus, reduced flare may be added to the signs of increased vulnerability for the disease. The histamine wheals were not smaller in the old men than in the two groups of younger people, when height or diameter was calculated. However, areas of the elevation of casts, representing histamine wheals, were smaller in the old men. The results indicate that neurogenic inflammation is of importance for the size of histamine-evoked edema. Then, if a small edema as compared to a large one implies lowered defense against viruses remains to be demonstrated. Mast cells in viral, bacterial and fungal infections Histamine receptors and COVID-19 Association between histamine-containing mast cells and sensory nerves in the skin and airways of control and capsaicin-treated pigs A brief-review of the risk factors for covid-19 severity Are we equal in adversity? Does Covid-19 affect women and men differently Position Paper: allergen standardization and skin tests Colour change in the human histamine wheal made visible by LYYN: a technique to enhance colour differences Re-sensitization of desensitized histamine H1 receptors in the human skin takes more than 18 hours Skin test reactivity to histamine from infancy to old age Innervation of the skin of the forearm in diabetic patients: relation to nerve function Diabetes mellitus is associated with increased mortality and severity of disease in COVID-19 pneumonia -a systematic review, meta-analysis, and meta-regression How to cite this article: Malm L. Reduced ability to produce reflex-evoked neurogenic inflammation, a sign of decreased defense against COVID-19 infection? The author declares no conflict of interest. Lars Malm https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3408-4455