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CLINICAL AND LABORATORY ASPECTS OF DETECTING SPECIFIC IgE ANTIBODIES TO COW’S MILK AND ITS COMPONENTS

https://doi.org/10.15789/1563-0625-2019-5-937-944

Abstract

Food allergy against cow milk and its components is highly prevalent among infants and children of pre-school and young school age being a sufficient factor influencing health condition of children during the maturation period. Clinical signs of the milk allergy are non-specific, and they may be pronounced or expressed in mild form, thus enabling hypodiagnistics of this disorder. Moreover, a variety of milk antigens determines different clinical course of this allergic condition and brings additional difficulties to its diagnostics and treatment. Meanwhile, a sensibilization for the cow milk proteins may sometimes trigger a generalized atopy and bronchial asthma, being a factor delayed growth and other health disorders. At the present time, there are no distinct risk criteria for milk allergy. Therefore, its successful prophylaxis and treatment largely depends on the competence of clinical allergologist and informativity of the diagnostic techniques used. So far, however, we have no generally approved laboratory algorithms for diagnostics and monitoring of treatment efficiency in the cow milk allergy and its compomemts.

We have performed a laboratory study of 187 children at the age of 3 months to 10 years. An immunochemoluminescent assay of specific IgE antibody levels to the cow milk using IMMULITE 2000/XPi analyzer has revealed its good informative value at different approaches to prediction and evaluation of food allergy treatment, both oriented for a critical cutoff value of 3 МU/L, and by monitoring a decrease in antibody levels. The authors consider rational an extended indefinity principle during the patient-oriented interpretation of IgE assay results if clinical decision is based on critical value of the index. In cases of clinical monitoring, the limit of interim reproducibility should be taken into account. The prevalence of specific cow milk antibodies among the boys was higher than among girls, however, with lesser frequency of moderate/high reactivity among the males. Moreover. the cases were detected with higher levels of anti-beta-lactalbumin IgG than those against whole milk. This finding should be considered during the screening studies.

On the basis of literature analysis and own results, the authors propose an extensive study of specific IgE antibodies against cow milk and its components in blood serum of infants and children form the pre-school and junior school age groups.

 

About the Authors

N. A. Alkhutova
А. Nikiforov Russian Center of Emergency and Radiation Medicine
Russian Federation

Kovyazina Nadezhda A., PhD (Medicine), Head, Laboratory of Serology Studies and Allergodiagnostics, Department of Laboratory Diagnostics

194044, Russian Federation, St. Petersburg, Acad. Lebedev str., 4/2.

Phone: 7 (812) 702-63-45.



N. A. Kovyazina
А. Nikiforov Russian Center of Emergency and Radiation Medicine
Russian Federation

PhD (Biology), Senior Research Associate, Laboratory of Serology Studies and Allergodiagnostics, Department of Laboratory Diagnostics

St. Petersburg


O. L. Zhizhina
St. Elisabeth Municipal Hospital, St. Petersburg
Russian Federation
PhD (Medicine), Physician, Clinical Endocrinology Department


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For citations:


Alkhutova N.A., Kovyazina N.A., Zhizhina O.L. CLINICAL AND LABORATORY ASPECTS OF DETECTING SPECIFIC IgE ANTIBODIES TO COW’S MILK AND ITS COMPONENTS. Medical Immunology (Russia). 2019;21(5):937-944. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.15789/1563-0625-2019-5-937-944

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ISSN 1563-0625 (Print)
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