| Literature DB >> 36104791 |
Peshala Gunasekara1, S M Handunnetti2, Sunil Premawansa3, E W R A Witharana4, Indra P Ratnayake5, Pradeep Kaluarachchi6, Chandima Karunatilake7, R K S Dias8, G A S Premakumara9, W M D K Dasanayake7, Suranjith L Seneviratne10,11, Rajiva de Silva7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Allergy to Apis dorsata (Giant Asian Honeybee) venom is the commonest insect allergy in Sri Lanka and South East Asia. However, laboratory diagnosis is difficult as the pure venom and diagnostic reagents are not commercially available.Entities:
Keywords: Apis dorsata; Apis mellifera; CD63; Cross-reactivity; Recombinant allergens
Year: 2022 PMID: 36104791 PMCID: PMC9476696 DOI: 10.1186/s12948-022-00178-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Mol Allergy ISSN: 1476-7961
Clinical data of the selected patients
| Clinical reaction | Total and percentage (%; n = 30) |
|---|---|
| Mild | |
| Pruritus | 15 (50%) |
| Urticaria | 16 (53%) |
| Erythema | – |
| Mild angio-oedema | 30 (100%) |
| Rhinitis | – |
| Conjunctivitis | – |
| Moderate | |
| Mild asthma | 7 (23%) |
| Moderate angio-oedema | 8 (26%) |
| Abdominal pain, vomiting | 8 (26%) |
| Diarrhoea | 5 (17%) |
| Minor and transient hypotensive symptoms (light headedness, dizziness) | 4 (13%) |
| Severe | |
| Respiratory difficulty (asthma/laryngeal oedema) | – |
| Hypotension | 10 (33%) |
| Collapse or loss of consciousness | 20 (66%) |
| Incontinence | 4 (13%) |
| Seizures | – |
| Loss of colour vision | – |
Fig. 1Evaluation of percentage positivity of IgE in Phadia ImmunoCAP; graph indicates IgE positivity to crude A. mellifera (immunologically similar to A. dorsata) venom, IgE positivity to venom components of A. mellifera in ImmunoCAP and “false” double-positivity (positivity to the venom of both honeybee and hornet)
Fig. 2Correlation of IgE cross-reactivity to crude venom of Apis mellifera with that of recombinant allergens of A. mellifera venom; A rApi m 1, B rApi m 2, C rApi m 5, D rApi m 10, E rApi m 1 and 10 combined, F rApi m 2 and 5 combined. Correlation of IgE cross-reactivity to crude venom of V. vulgaris with that of recombinant allergens of A. mellifera venom; G rApi m 1, H rApi m 2, I rApi m 5, J rApi m 10, K rApi m 1 and 10 combined, L rApi m 2 and 5 combined. IgE to rApi m 1 and rApi m 1 and 10 combined showed a significant correlation with IgE to A. mellifera crude venom. IgE to Api m 2, Api m 5 and Api m 2 and 5 combined showed a significant correlation with IgE to V. vulgaris crude venom
Fig. 3Upregulation and expression of CD63 in passively immune donor basophils by A. dorsata venom and evaluation of the percentage positivity of one patient; A gating of lymphocytes; B high IgEpos population from the lymphocyte gate selected; C non-stimulated baseline control; D native control from an atopic non-Hymenoptera allergic individual; E positive control (fMLP); F positive control (polyclonal anti-IgE); G test with patient#8 using 1 µg/mL A. dorsata venom
Fig. 4Evaluation of donor dependency of the test; A %CD63 activation of basophils from donor 1 incubated with sera from patient #5; B %CD63 activation of basophils from two donor 2 incubated with sera from patient #5; C %CD63 activation of basophils from two donor 1 incubated with sera from patient #10; D %CD63 activation of basophils from two donor 2 incubated with sera from patient #10 (all test were performed using 1 µg/mL of A. dorsata venom)
Fig. 5Comparison of percentage basophil activation in passive BAT and severity of the patients