An analysis of skin prick test reactions in 656 asthmatic patients.
Open Access
- 1 February 1975
- Vol. 30 (1) , 2-8
- https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.30.1.2
Abstract
Of 656 asthmatic patients referred specifically for allergy assessments, 544 (84 percent) gave positive immediate skin prick tests to at least one of 22 common allergens used routinely. Comparison of these skin test positive patients with the 102 (16 percent) who were skin test negative showed a number of significant differences. The majority of the skin test positive patients (52 percent) were less than 10 years old at the time of onset of the asthma, whereas, of the skin test negative patients, 56 percent were aged over 30 years at the time of onset. Seventy per cent report rhinitis compared with 48 per cent of the skin test negative patients, and 29 per cent reported infantile eczema compared with 9 per cent. Symptoms attributed to house dust, pollens, and animals were noted two to three times more frequently by the skin test positive patients, while corticosteroid drugs had been used more commonly by the skin test negative patients (45 percent compared with 35 percent). No significant differences were observed with the other factors studied, namely, history of urticaria or angio-oedema, family history of "allergic" disease, and awareness of sensitivity to foods, aspirin or penicillin. Prick test reactions in the skin test positive patients were most commonly seen to house dust or the acarine mite, Dermatophagoides farinae (82 percent), followed by pollens (66 percent), animal danders (38 percent), foods (16 percent), Aspergillus fumigatus (16 percent), and other moulds (21 percent). There was a highly significant association of positive history with positive prick test for all allergens studied.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pharmacodynamic Properties of ??-Adrenergic Receptor Blocking Drugs in ManDrugs, 1974
- Skin tests and atopic allergy in childrenClinical and Experimental Allergy, 1973
- Clinical significance of total IgE and of specific IgE to Dermatophagoides spp., grass pollen and other common allergens II. Relationship to clinical manifestationsClinical and Experimental Allergy, 1972
- Double-blind three-dose trial of oral alprenolol in angina pectoris.Heart, 1971
- Acute effects of oral alprenolol on exercise tolerance in patients with angina pectoris. A dose-response study.Heart, 1971
- Comparison of effects of propranolol and practolol on exercise tolerance in angina pectoris.Heart, 1971
- Propranolol in the therapy of angina pectorisThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1966
- PROFESSOR WILLEM STORM VAN LEEUWEN AND THE ASTHMA PROBLEMAllergy, 1958
- ASSESSMENT OF THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF THE ALLERGIC, INFECTIVE AND PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS IN ASTHMAAllergy, 1958
- NATURAL HISTORY OF ASTHMAAllergy, 1958