Sharman J, Kumar L, Singh S
Department of Pediatrics, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Indian J Pediatr. 2000 Oct;67(10):713-20. doi: 10.1007/BF02723925.
Although hypersensitivity to foods is often linked to exacerbations of symptoms of respiratory allergy, no such information is available regarding the foods traditionally considered to play a probable etiological role in respiratory allergy in India, which are in fact quite different from the ones implicated in the West. The present study was undertaken to investigate whether the practice of withholding certain common foods by parents and practitioners of indigenous systems of medicine (i.e. Ayurvedic and Unani systems of medicine) in children suffering from respiratory allergy had any scientific basis or explanation as judged by modern techniques of investigation. Skin prick tests were performed on 64 children with symptoms pertaining to respiratory allergy (32 each in study and control group) using crude antigenic food extracts. Oral food challenges were administered to children to confirm or rule out allergenicity of food (s) incriminated on the basis of the clinical history and/or a positive skin test. Parental history of food restriction alone, in absence of positive skin prick test was of little value in predicting a positive response to the food challenges (1 challenge positive out of 77 based on food restriction: 1.29%). Only 27.02% and 18.75% of positive skin tests were found to be clinically significant in study and control groups respectively. Traditionally, food beliefs were upheld in only 12.5% children for immediate onset clinical reactions (with 5.31% of the foods restricted in their diet) and 9.37% children for delayed onset clinical reactions (with 3.19% of the foods restricted in their diet). The present study shows that even though food restriction is a common practice in patients with respiratory allergy in India, objective documentation of Type I reactions due to these foods cannot be obtained in a majority of such children.
尽管食物过敏常与呼吸道过敏症状的加重有关,但对于印度传统上被认为可能在呼吸道过敏中起病因作用的食物,尚无此类信息,而这些食物实际上与西方所涉及的食物有很大不同。本研究旨在调查印度传统医学体系(即阿育吠陀医学和尤纳尼医学体系)的家长和从业者对患有呼吸道过敏的儿童禁食某些常见食物的做法,根据现代调查技术判断是否有任何科学依据或解释。使用粗制抗原性食物提取物对64名有呼吸道过敏症状的儿童(研究组和对照组各32名)进行皮肤点刺试验。对儿童进行口服食物激发试验,以确认或排除根据临床病史和/或阳性皮肤试验确定的可疑食物的致敏性。仅根据食物限制的家长病史,在皮肤点刺试验为阴性的情况下,对食物激发试验阳性反应的预测价值不大(基于食物限制的77次激发试验中有1次阳性:1.29%)。在研究组和对照组中,分别只有27.02%和18.75%的阳性皮肤试验在临床上具有显著意义。传统上,只有12.5%的儿童因即时发作的临床反应坚持食物观念(其饮食中限制了5.31%的食物),9.37%的儿童因延迟发作的临床反应坚持食物观念(其饮食中限制了3.19%的食物)。本研究表明,尽管在印度呼吸道过敏患者中食物限制是一种常见做法,但在大多数此类儿童中无法获得因这些食物引起的I型反应的客观记录。