| Literature DB >> 26635908 |
Peter K Smith1, Jonathan O'B Hourihane2, Phil Lieberman3.
Abstract
Anaphylaxis is a severe, life threatening allergic reaction. In most fatal cases of food anaphylaxis, the fatality is not due merely to a simple, linear relationship between the allergen and exposure in a sensitized individual. Compounding factors such as the allergic disease burden-particularly the presence of asthma; comprehension of the potential severity of an event, training in the appropriate use of epinephrine, and emerging metabolic factors should be considered when assessing risk and establishing management strategies. This paper reviews the factors that contribute to the risk of severe anaphylactic events and provides a framework for the ongoing management of patients at risk of severe food allergy.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26635908 PMCID: PMC4657220 DOI: 10.1186/s40413-015-0081-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World Allergy Organ J ISSN: 1939-4551 Impact factor: 4.084
Fig. 1Layers and multiplication factors relating to risk in severe food allergy: 1. Dose of antigen, which can be altered by concealment factors, 2. Age—most deaths from food allergy are in the young, but older patients tend to have more severe reactions with nut allergy, 3. Timely effective treatment, 4. Co-existent allergic burden, and 5. Metabolic/Pharmacologic factors including: capacity to catabolize allergic mediators, exercise, illness, ethanol and medications.
Fig. 2An allergic individual's response to an allergen may vary because of dose, treatment and threshold factors. Timely, effective treatment limits, but does not control, all reactions. Apertures are larger depending on the presence of risk factors. Fatal and severe reactions appear more likely if there is a combination and alignment of risk factors. In the example, a similar dose in patients with equivalent levels of severe food allergy has different clinical outcomes. A mild reaction is the outcome in a patient with less current allergic disease, less metabolic factors, less contributing medications and early effective use of epinephrine. These factors are shown to amplify in a severe allergic reaction