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74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy

BACKGROUND: Food allergy primarily causes anaphylaxis in children. Food such as egg, cow milk, wheat and peanut are common allergen in Japan. METHODS: In this study total IgE, IgE RAST value and prick test are evaluated to monitor the efficacy outcome in wheat or hen's egg-allergy infants treat...

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Autores principales: Noma, Takeshi, Ogawa, Norifumi, Oshiba, Akihiro, Mikami, Kentaro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: World Allergy Organization Journal 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3512876/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.WOX.0000411819.08764.b7
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author Noma, Takeshi
Ogawa, Norifumi
Oshiba, Akihiro
Mikami, Kentaro
author_facet Noma, Takeshi
Ogawa, Norifumi
Oshiba, Akihiro
Mikami, Kentaro
author_sort Noma, Takeshi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Food allergy primarily causes anaphylaxis in children. Food such as egg, cow milk, wheat and peanut are common allergen in Japan. METHODS: In this study total IgE, IgE RAST value and prick test are evaluated to monitor the efficacy outcome in wheat or hen's egg-allergy infants treated with slow specific oral tolerance induction (sSOTI) therapy. RESULTS: The 3 infants suffered from IgE-mediated food allergy (wheat: 2 years 8 or 10 months old boy [threshold dose 25 g] and girl [0.7 g], hen's egg: 4 years 9 months old girl [1.8 g]), diagnosed, by food challenge, as allergy to wheat and egg. Then, the patients were treated with sSOTI either with hard-boiled egg or wheat noodle at home daily starting with 0.1 g, respectively, increased to a dose of 60 g egg or 100 g wheat, every one to 2 weeks in double dose of the weight, until tolerance was taken on. The daily maintenance dose was 10 g for each food. Four weeks later confirmed was evolution of tolerance by re-challenge. The safety and efficacy of the sSOTI therapy were confirmed in these infants. Total IgE levels were increased after SOTI therapy whereas IgE RAST value to causative antigen such as egg and wheat, contrastingly reduced. IgE RAST value to some other food as cow's milk, reduced coincidently by bystander inhibition. IgE RAST value to a food, negative in prick test, was increased again, whereas that to a food, positive in the test, was carried on. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicates that sSOTI therapy induced causative antigen-specific IgE-mediated tolerance in children with wheat or egg allergy, and the set of total IgE increased, reduced IgE RAST value and positive prick test was of service to evaluate evolution of tolerance in slow SOTI therapy.
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spelling pubmed-35128762012-12-21 74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy Noma, Takeshi Ogawa, Norifumi Oshiba, Akihiro Mikami, Kentaro World Allergy Organ J Abstracts of the XXII World Allergy Congress BACKGROUND: Food allergy primarily causes anaphylaxis in children. Food such as egg, cow milk, wheat and peanut are common allergen in Japan. METHODS: In this study total IgE, IgE RAST value and prick test are evaluated to monitor the efficacy outcome in wheat or hen's egg-allergy infants treated with slow specific oral tolerance induction (sSOTI) therapy. RESULTS: The 3 infants suffered from IgE-mediated food allergy (wheat: 2 years 8 or 10 months old boy [threshold dose 25 g] and girl [0.7 g], hen's egg: 4 years 9 months old girl [1.8 g]), diagnosed, by food challenge, as allergy to wheat and egg. Then, the patients were treated with sSOTI either with hard-boiled egg or wheat noodle at home daily starting with 0.1 g, respectively, increased to a dose of 60 g egg or 100 g wheat, every one to 2 weeks in double dose of the weight, until tolerance was taken on. The daily maintenance dose was 10 g for each food. Four weeks later confirmed was evolution of tolerance by re-challenge. The safety and efficacy of the sSOTI therapy were confirmed in these infants. Total IgE levels were increased after SOTI therapy whereas IgE RAST value to causative antigen such as egg and wheat, contrastingly reduced. IgE RAST value to some other food as cow's milk, reduced coincidently by bystander inhibition. IgE RAST value to a food, negative in prick test, was increased again, whereas that to a food, positive in the test, was carried on. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicates that sSOTI therapy induced causative antigen-specific IgE-mediated tolerance in children with wheat or egg allergy, and the set of total IgE increased, reduced IgE RAST value and positive prick test was of service to evaluate evolution of tolerance in slow SOTI therapy. World Allergy Organization Journal 2012-02-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3512876/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.WOX.0000411819.08764.b7 Text en Copyright © 2012 by World Allergy Organization
spellingShingle Abstracts of the XXII World Allergy Congress
Noma, Takeshi
Ogawa, Norifumi
Oshiba, Akihiro
Mikami, Kentaro
74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy
title 74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy
title_full 74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy
title_fullStr 74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy
title_full_unstemmed 74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy
title_short 74 Analysis of IGE, IGE Rast Value and Prick Test in Wheat or Hen's Egg-Allergy Infants Treated with Slow Specific Oral Tolerance Induction Therapy
title_sort 74 analysis of ige, ige rast value and prick test in wheat or hen's egg-allergy infants treated with slow specific oral tolerance induction therapy
topic Abstracts of the XXII World Allergy Congress
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3512876/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.WOX.0000411819.08764.b7
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