BACKGROUND: Systemic anaphylaxis after the ingestion of mite-contaminated food has rarely been reported. OBJECTIVE: To describe an 8-year-old boy in whom systemic anaphylaxis developed shortly after the ingestion of pancakes prepared with commercial pancake flour. METHODS: The patient underwent skin prick testing for house dust mites and with uncontaminated and mite-contaminated pancake flour. Specific IgE for mites and the main ingredients of the pancake flour were also evaluated, with titers for Der p 1, Der f 1, and Blo t 5 quantitated using immunochemical methods. A sample of pancake flour was examined microscopically for mites. RESULTS: The patient had positive skin prick test results to contaminated pancake flour extract (1 g/5 mL), Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, and Dermatophagoides farinae but a negative skin test response to uncontaminated pancake flour. The patient's serum specific IgE analysis was positive for antibodies to dust and storage mite allergens. There was no response, however, to the main ingredients of the pancake mix. Microscopic examination of the pancake flour revealed the storage mite Blomia freemani. Using an immunochemical assay, we found that the contaminated flour contained 5.4 microg/g of the allergen Blo t 5 but no Der p 1 or Der f 1. CONCLUSIONS: This patient's anaphylactic episode was the result of ingestion of the storage mite B. freemani. To our knowledge, this is the first reported systemic hypersensitivity reaction caused by this mite anywhere in the world.
BACKGROUND: Systemic anaphylaxis after the ingestion of mite-contaminated food has rarely been reported. OBJECTIVE: To describe an 8-year-old boy in whom systemic anaphylaxis developed shortly after the ingestion of pancakes prepared with commercial pancake flour. METHODS: The patient underwent skin prick testing for house dust mites and with uncontaminated and mite-contaminated pancake flour. Specific IgE for mites and the main ingredients of the pancake flour were also evaluated, with titers for Der p 1, Der f 1, and Blo t 5 quantitated using immunochemical methods. A sample of pancake flour was examined microscopically for mites. RESULTS: The patient had positive skin prick test results to contaminated pancake flour extract (1 g/5 mL), Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, and Dermatophagoides farinae but a negative skin test response to uncontaminated pancake flour. The patient's serum specific IgE analysis was positive for antibodies to dust and storage mite allergens. There was no response, however, to the main ingredients of the pancake mix. Microscopic examination of the pancake flour revealed the storage mite Blomia freemani. Using an immunochemical assay, we found that the contaminated flour contained 5.4 microg/g of the allergen Blo t 5 but no Der p 1 or Der f 1. CONCLUSIONS: This patient's anaphylactic episode was the result of ingestion of the storage mite B. freemani. To our knowledge, this is the first reported systemic hypersensitivity reaction caused by this mite anywhere in the world.
Authors: Jay Portnoy; Jeffrey D Miller; P Brock Williams; Ginger L Chew; J David Miller; Fares Zaitoun; Wanda Phipatanakul; Kevin Kennedy; Charles Barnes; Carl Grimes; Désirée Larenas-Linnemann; James Sublett; David Bernstein; Joann Blessing-Moore; David Khan; David Lang; Richard Nicklas; John Oppenheimer; Christopher Randolph; Diane Schuller; Sheldon Spector; Stephen A Tilles; Dana Wallace Journal: Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol Date: 2013-12 Impact factor: 6.347