Cases reported "Hypersensitivity"

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1/3. Demonstration of reactivity to airborne and food allergens in cutaneous vasculitis by variations in fibrinopeptide a and other blood coagulation, fibrinolysis and complement parameters.

    In a 32-year-old woman and a 40-year-old man with cutaneous vasculitis, etiological allergic responses to foods and airborne allergens were found. During provocation tests, observations were made on blood levels of fibrinopeptide a(FPA) and coagulation factors, fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) and serum complement components. skin biopsies were taken for microscopic and immunofluorescence analysis. In case 1, anaphylactoid allergy to milk and reaginic and anaphylactoid hypersensitivity to grass pollens were found. Dermal provocations with grass pollens gave arthralgia, hematomas, serum C3 fluctuation, factor vii reduction and fibrinolysis. During peroral milk challenge, transient increases in FPA and FDP levels were observed before symptoms appeared. In case 2, anaphylactoid hypersensitivity responses to bacteria, animal danders, foods and pollens were found. Two inhalations with sheep-wool extract resulted in a typical skin eruption. The first also gave an early reduction of C3 and then FPA liberation. Nasal birch-pollen test gave an increase of FPA in the latent period and then typical nodules. At least no low molecular weight FDP were detected during provocations. In patients with vasculitis reactions to exogenous allergens, FPA and FDP estimations after provocations may discriminate harmful from innocuous allergens and reveal individual response patterns in coagulation and fibrinolysis systems.
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keywords = grass
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2/3. A novel inhalation allergen present in the working environment of beekeepers.

    BACKGROUND: inhalation allergies, caused by allergens from various kinds of pollen, house dust mites, animal epithelium, and mould fungi, are strongly increasing in frequency. In 2.6% of the cases the allergen source remains unidentified. The present paper describes a so far unknown inhalation allergy which was observed in the case of a patient working with hives. methods AND RESULTS: The allergen was characterized by immunoblotting, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay inhibition, and isoelectrofocusing, using the serum of the patient. It is present in both the bee bodies and the larvae, has a molecular mass of 13 kDa, and an isoelectric point of 5.85. It is thermolabile and does not cross-react with allergens from birch, mugwort and timothy grass pollen, mould fungi, or bee venom. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of allergen from larvae was determined to be (2)QIEELKTRLHT(12). A similar allergen of 13 kDa was also found in Varroa mite accompanying bee populations. CONCLUSION: honey bees (including the larva stadium) and Varroa mite contain a 13-kDa protein causing an allergic reaction. Presently, there is no evidence whether the case described is a singular phenomenon or whether this allergen is a more common inducer of allergies among subjects exposed to honey bees. However, a bee and Varroa mite allergy has to be considered for beekeepers after exclusion of known inhalation allergies.
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keywords = grass
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3/3. Atopy in cough sensitivity to capsaicin and bronchial responsiveness in young females.

    We have shown previously that female sex is a determinant of cough sensitivity to inhaled capsaicin, but the relationship between atopy and the cough sensitivity has not been examined. The capsaicin cough threshold, defined as the lowest concentration of capsaicin causing five or more coughs, nonspecific bronchial responsiveness, defined as the provocative concentration of methacholine causing a 20% fall in the forced expiratory volume in one second (PC20), total immunoglobulin e (IgE) and specific IgEs to eight common aeroallergens (house dust 1, 2 and 6, dermatophagoides pteronyssinus and D. farinae, Japanese cedar, ragweed and orchard grass) in the serum were measured in 71 nonsmoking, healthy young women aged 20.6 /-0.1 yrs (mean /-EM). A structured interviewer-led questionnaire on allergic diseases revealed that one and six subjects had mild current and past asthma, respectively. These seven subjects were excluded from the data analysis. PC20 was significantly lower in 42 subjects showing a positive specific IgE than in 22 subjects showing a negative specific IgE to any of the eight allergens (p<0.05), while the capsaicin cough threshold was not significantly different between the subgroups. PC20 was significantly lower in subjects with positive specific IgE to Dermatophagoides and house dust, but not to the three kinds of pollen examined. It was confirmed that atopy indicated by specific immunoglobulin e to mite-related antigens, but not to pollen antigens, is associated with nonspecific bronchial responsiveness, and it is suggested that atopy is not a determinant of airway cough sensitivity in healthy, nonasthmatic subjects.
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keywords = grass
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