
Current ideas of allergic inflammation reflected in the concept of immune inflammation are described. This concept considers immune inflammation to be an immune response mediated by a certain immunity reaction which gives the inflammation a number of qualitative and quantitative differences. The nature of the differences allows allergic (immune) inflammation to be evaluated as a biologically expedient type of defence-adaptative reaction in which the inflammatory response is optimally expressed owing to the participation of immunological mechanisms.
Eosinophils, Inflammation, Neutrophils, Macrophages, Hypersensitivity, Humans, Immunoglobulins, Histamine, Rhinitis
Eosinophils, Inflammation, Neutrophils, Macrophages, Hypersensitivity, Humans, Immunoglobulins, Histamine, Rhinitis
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