Diagnosis and Immunotherapy of Mould Allergy |
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Authors: | H.-J. Malling |
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Affiliation: | Laboratory of Clinical Allergology, State University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark |
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Abstract: | To determine reproducibility and the optimal way of expressing skin sensitivity, simultaneous skin prick tests (SPT) and intradermal tests (ICT) were performed on 25 mould-allergic patients. The patients had a well-documented history of allergy to Cladosporium and Alternaria and were tested with partially purified standardized extracts of these two mould species. Skin prick tests were carried out on the volar side of the forearm and intradermal tests on the backs of the patients. The skin tests were performed as titration using quadruplicate determinations of 10-fold allergen dilutions. The area of the skin reactions measured by planimetry were plotted in a log-log system as a function of the allergen concentration. The reproducibility (SD/mean area X 100%) of the ICTs was significantly higher than that of the SPTs (17% versus 29%). A very low reproducibility was found with wheal areas less than 5 mm2. The dose response curve of the SPT wheal area was steeper than that obtained with ICT, both concerning ICT wheal and flare. Increasing the allergen concentration with a factor 10 resulted in a doubling of the wheal area in SPT, in contrast to a factor 1.7 using ICT. The coefficient of correlation using linear regression on the dose response curve was always higher than 0.9 with SPT and ICT wheal, but significantly lower with ICT flare. Skin sensitivity was estimated as end-point and histamine equivalent reaction. No significant correlation between SPT and ICT end-point titration was found contrary to the histamine equivalent reaction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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Keywords: | end-point titration histamine equivalent reaction intradermal test mould allergy reproducibility skin prick test skin sensitivity |
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