Department of Pediatrics & Child Health, Department of Immunology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Department of Pediatrics, Allergy and Immunology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2015 May;135(5):1125-31. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2014.09.014. Epub 2014 Oct 30.
In this rostrum we aim to increase awareness of anaphylaxis in infancy in order to improve clinical diagnosis, management, and prevention of recurrences. Anaphylaxis is increasingly reported in this age group. Foods are the most common triggers. Presentation typically involves the skin (generalized urticaria), the respiratory tract (cough, wheeze, stridor, and dyspnea), and/or the gastrointestinal tract (persistent vomiting). Tryptase levels are seldom increased because of infant anaphylaxis, although baseline tryptase levels can be increased in the first few months of life, reflecting mast cell burden in the developing immune system. The differential diagnosis of infant anaphylaxis includes consideration of age-unique entities, such as food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome with acute presentation. Epinephrine (adrenaline) treatment is underused in health care and community settings. No epinephrine autoinjectors contain an optimal dose for infants weighing 10 kg or less. After treatment of an anaphylactic episode, follow-up with a physician, preferably an allergy/immunology specialist, is important for confirmation of anaphylaxis triggers and prevention of recurrences through avoidance of confirmed specific triggers. Natural desensitization to milk and egg can occur. Future research should include validation of the clinical criteria for anaphylaxis diagnosis in infants, prospective longitudinal monitoring of baseline serum tryptase levels in healthy and atopic infants during the first year of life, studies of infant comorbidities and cofactors that increase the risk of severe anaphylaxis, development of autoinjectors containing a 0.1-mg epinephrine dose suitable for infants, and inclusion of infants in prospective studies of immune modulation to prevent anaphylaxis recurrences.
在本次演讲中,我们旨在提高人们对婴儿过敏反应的认识,以改善临床诊断、管理和预防复发。在这个年龄段,过敏反应的报告越来越多。食物是最常见的触发因素。其表现通常涉及皮肤(全身性荨麻疹)、呼吸道(咳嗽、喘息、喘鸣和呼吸困难)和/或胃肠道(持续呕吐)。由于婴儿过敏反应,类胰蛋白酶水平很少增加,尽管在生命的头几个月,基础类胰蛋白酶水平可能会增加,这反映了正在发育的免疫系统中肥大细胞的负担。婴儿过敏反应的鉴别诊断包括考虑独特于该年龄段的实体,例如伴有急性表现的食物蛋白诱导的结肠炎综合征。在医疗保健和社区环境中,肾上腺素(肾上腺素)的治疗使用不足。没有一种肾上腺素自动注射器含有适合体重 10 公斤或以下婴儿的最佳剂量。在治疗过敏反应发作后,由医生(最好是过敏/免疫学专家)进行随访,对于确认过敏反应触发因素和通过避免确认的特定触发因素预防复发非常重要。牛奶和鸡蛋的自然脱敏可能会发生。未来的研究应包括验证婴儿过敏反应诊断的临床标准,在生命的第一年对健康和特应性婴儿的基础血清类胰蛋白酶水平进行前瞻性纵向监测,研究婴儿合并症和增加严重过敏反应风险的因素,开发含有适合婴儿的 0.1 毫克肾上腺素剂量的自动注射器,以及将婴儿纳入预防过敏反应复发的免疫调节前瞻性研究中。