Zeitschriftenaufsatz | 2017

Comparing immediate-type food allergy in humans and companion animalsrevealing unmet needs

Autor:in
Pali-Schoell, Isabella; De Lucia, Michela; Jackson, Hilary; Janda, Jozef; Mueller, Ryan; Jensen-Jarolim, Erika
Publikationen als Autor:in / Herausgeber:in der Vetmeduni
Journal
Abstrakt
Adverse food reactions occur in human as well as veterinary patients. Systematic comparison may lead to improved recommendations for prevention and treatment in both. In this position paper, we summarize the current knowledge on immediate-type food allergy vs other food adverse reactions in companion animals, and compare this to the human situation. While the prevalence of food allergy in humans has been well studied for some allergens, this remains to be investigated for animal patients, where owner-reported as well as veterinarian-diagnosed food adverse reactions are on the increase. The characteristics of the disease in humans vs dogs, cats, and horses are most often caused by similar, but sometimes species-dependent different pathophysiological mechanisms, prompting the specific clinical symptoms, diagnoses, and treatments. Furthermore, little is known about the allergen molecules causative for type I food allergy in animals, which, like in human patients, could represent predictive biomarkers for risk evaluation. The definite diagnosis of food allergy reliesas in humanson elimination diet and provocation tests. Besides allergen avoidance in daily practice, novel treatment options and tolerization strategies are underway. Taken together, numerous knowledge gaps were identified in veterinary food allergy, which need to be filled by systematic comparative studies.
Schlagwörter
cats; dogs; food allergy; horses; molecular allergens
Dokumententyp
Originalarbeit
ISSN/eISSN
0105-4538 - 1398-9995

Weitere Details

Band
72
Startseite
1643
letzte Seite
1656
Nummer
11
Seitenanzahl
14