Allergy to foods in patients monosensitized to Artemisia pollen |
| |
Authors: | J. C. Garcia Ortiz P. Cosmes Martin A. Lopez-Asunsolo |
| |
Affiliation: | Servicio de Alergia, Hospital Los Montalvos, Salamanca;Unidad de Alergologia, Hospital Virgen del Puerto, Plasencia (Caceres), Spain |
| |
Abstract: | It is known that patients with pollinosis may display clinical characteristics caused by allergy to certain fruits and vegetables, but subjects allergic to Artemisia seem to show particularly peculiar characteristics. The clinical features of 84 patients with rhinitis, asthma, urticaria, and/or anaphylaxis whose inhalant allergy was exclusively to Artemisia vulgaris were studied and compared with a control group of 50 patients monosensitized to grass pollen. The mean age for the beginning of symptoms was 30.2 years, and this was higher than in the control group ( P <0.05). We found the main incidence to be in women (70.2%). Some 42.3% had family history of atopia, lower than in the control group ( P <0.05), while the prevalence of asthma and urticaria was significantly higher ( P <0.05). Food hypersensitivity was reported by 23 patients (27.3%) allergic to Artemisia. The foods responsible (with respective numbers of cases) were honey (14), sunflower seeds (11), camomile (four), pistachio (three), hazelnut (two), lettuce (two), pollen (two), beer (two), almond (one), peanut (one), other nuts (one), carrot (one), and apple (one). None of the patients monosensitized to grass had food allergy. CAP inhibition experiments were carried out on a single patient. Results showed the existence of common antigenic epitopes in pistachio and Artemisia pollen for this patient. We concluded that mugwort hay fever can be associated with the Compositae family of foods, but that it is not normally associated with other foods. |
| |
Keywords: | Artemisia pollen allergy cross-reacting IgE food hypersensitivity pistachio pollen allergy |
|
|