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Contact allergy to impurities in surfactants: amount, chemical structure and carrier effect in reactions to 3‐dimethylaminopropylamine
Author(s) -
Angelini Gianni,
Rigano Luigi,
Foti Caterina,
Vena Gino A.,
Grandolfo Mauro
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
contact dermatitis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1600-0536
pISSN - 0105-1873
DOI - 10.1111/j.1600-0536.1996.tb02194.x
Subject(s) - chemistry , sensitization , impurity , molecule , ionic bonding , reagent , amine gas treating , allergy , chemical structure , organic chemistry , immunology , medicine , ion
Since finding that all Subject with contact allergy to cocamidopropylbetaine give positive reactions to 3‐dimethylaminopropylamine (DMPA), we wished to verify whether sensitization to other industrially‐used tensioactives might also be due to contact of DMPA as an impurity. We also investigated the possible “carrier action” that tensioactives might exert on minimal quantities of DMPA. Finally, we analyzed the relationship between the structure of DMPA and other chemically‐correlated molecules and their sensitizing potential, with particular reference to the structure of alkylam‐idopropylbetaines. For this purpose, in 34 patients with contact allergy to DMPA, we tested: (i) DMPA in concentrations below the threshold limit in water and in different tensioactives: (ii) substances that employ DMPA as a reagent in their synthesis: (iii) substances similar to DMPA as regards chemically reactive groups. The study showed that: (i) DMPA remains as a quantitatively detectable impurity in all tensioactives employing it in their synthesis: (ii) some common anionic (SLES) and non‐ionic (polysorbate 20) tensioactives enhance the risk of sensitization from very low doses of DMPA, presumably due to a “carrier effect:” (iii) the sensitizing chemical structures in DMPA and related molecules are the primary amine and the tertiary (dimethyl‐substituted) amine groups, when separated by either 2 or 3 carbon atoms:(iv) no sensitizing action can be attributed to the functional groups present in alkylamidopropylbetaine molecules.

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