Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:1003...

Topic
Original Research
Author
Zheng, Chunjiao Zou, Ying
Langue
en
Editor

Dove

Category

Journal of Asthma and Allergy

Year

2023

listing date

8/16/2024

Keywords
species shanghai sex allergen
Metrics

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Allergen distribution has obvious geographical characteristics.

Understanding local epidemiological data may provide evidence-based strategies for the prevention and management of disease.

We investigated the distribution of allergen sensitization in patients with skin diseases in Shanghai, China.

METHODS: Data from tests for serum-specific immunoglobulin E were collected from 714 patients with three skin diseases who visited the Shanghai Skin Disease Hospital from January 2020 to February 2022.

The prevalence of 16 allergen species, as well as age, sex, and disease-group differences in allergen sensitization, were investigated.

RESULTS: Dermatophagoides farinae and Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus were the most common aeroallergen species to cause allergic sensitization in patients with skin diseases, whereas shrimp and crab were the most common food-allergen species.

Children were more susceptible to various allergen species.

With regard to sex differences, males were sensitized to more allergen species than females.

Patients suffering from atopic dermatitis were sensitized to more allergenic species than patients with non-atopic eczema or urticaria.

CONCLUSION: Allergen sensitization in patients with skin diseases in Shanghai differed by age, sex, and disease type.

Knowing the prevalence of allergen sensitization across age, sex, and disease type may help facilitate diagnostic and intervention efforts, and guide the treatment and management of skin diseases in Shanghai.

Zheng, Chunjiao,Zou, Ying, 2023, Allergen Sensitization in Patients with Skin Diseases in Shanghai, China, Dove

Document

Open Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

An Updated Overview of Existing Cancer Databases and Identified Needs
advancements insights assess review lipidomics glycomics proteomics databases research cancer