TY - JOUR
T1 - Food hypersensitivity and atopic dermatitis
T2 - Pathophysiology, epidemiology, diagnosis, and management
AU - Sicherer, Scott H.
AU - Sampson, Hugh A.
PY - 1999
Y1 - 1999
N2 - Laboratory and clinical investigations over the past two decades have demonstrated that food allergy plays a pathogenic role in a subset of patients, primarily infants and children, with atopic dermatitis (AD). Approximately 40% of infants and young children with moderate to severe AD have food allergy, but identifying this subset of patients and isolating the relevant food allergens requires a high index of suspicion, the use of appropriate laboratory tests, and, in some cases, physician-supervised oral food challenges. Removal of the causal food protein(s) leads to clinical improvement but requires a great deal of education because most of the common causal foods (egg, milk, wheat, soy, peanut, and so forth) are ubiquitous in the food supply, and food elimination diets risk causing nutritional deficits. Fortunately, most food allergies resolve in early childhood, and food allergy is not a common cause for AD in older children and adults.
AB - Laboratory and clinical investigations over the past two decades have demonstrated that food allergy plays a pathogenic role in a subset of patients, primarily infants and children, with atopic dermatitis (AD). Approximately 40% of infants and young children with moderate to severe AD have food allergy, but identifying this subset of patients and isolating the relevant food allergens requires a high index of suspicion, the use of appropriate laboratory tests, and, in some cases, physician-supervised oral food challenges. Removal of the causal food protein(s) leads to clinical improvement but requires a great deal of education because most of the common causal foods (egg, milk, wheat, soy, peanut, and so forth) are ubiquitous in the food supply, and food elimination diets risk causing nutritional deficits. Fortunately, most food allergies resolve in early childhood, and food allergy is not a common cause for AD in older children and adults.
KW - Atopic dermatitis
KW - Food allergy
KW - Oral food challenges
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/0032850685
U2 - 10.1016/S0091-6749(99)70053-9
DO - 10.1016/S0091-6749(99)70053-9
M3 - Article
C2 - 10482862
AN - SCOPUS:0032850685
SN - 0091-6749
VL - 104
SP - S114-S122
JO - Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
JF - Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
IS - 3 SUPPL.
ER -