Tree pollen allergy
- 28 April 1987
- Vol. 42 (3) , 205-214
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1398-9995.1987.tb02201.x
Abstract
872 adult hay fever patients were investigated with skin tests, using 20 different tree pollen allergens, and Phadebas RAST, using eight different tree pollen allergens. Correlation between test results with the different allergens were studied employing the Spearman''s correlation coefficient (Rho). Most combinations showed statistically significant correlations. The highest values of Rho (0.8-0.9) were found for pollen from combinations of trees belonging to the families Betulaceae, Corylaceae and Fagaceae (birch, alder, hazel, beech and oak). High values were also found between pollens from aspen and sallow (belonging to Salicaceae). With several of the trees a high degree of pollen cross sensitization was found, even with trees from a different plant family. Since most of the patients were allergic to birch pollen, some of the reactions to other pollens could be due to allergens shared by birch. To exclude this possibility, a separate analysis was performed for patients having no birch pollen allergy. Even in these patients evidence of cross sensitization was found. It is concluded that cross reactions are common among tree pollens and are most pronounced within botanical families.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cross‐reactivity between deciduous trees during immunotherapy. I. In vivo resultsClinical and Experimental Allergy, 1986
- Immunochemical Characterization of Reference Alder (Alnus glutinosa) and Hazel (Corylus avellana) Pollen Extracts and the Partial Immunochemical Identity between the Major Allergens of Alder, Birch and Hazel PollensAllergy, 1985
- Allergy in the Mediterranean area III: cross reactivity among Oleaceae pollensClinical and Experimental Allergy, 1985
- Tree Pollen AllergyAllergy, 1984
- Common Components in Pollen ExtractsAllergy, 1980
- Allergy to Pollen from Different Deciduous Trees in SwedenAllergy, 1978
- NORTHERN SOCIETY OF ALLERGOLOGYAllergy, 1972
- Immunological Analyses of Birch Pollen Antigens, with Special Reference to the Allergenic ComponentsInternational Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1972
- AN INVESTIGATION OF POLLEN EXTRACTS FROM DIFFERENT DECIDUOUS TREES IN PATIENTS WITH SPRINGTIME ALLERGY IN SWEDENAllergy, 1972