Background: Immunoglobulin E-mediated food allergy (FA) affects children and adults with variable age of onset. Phenotype and quality of life (QoL) differences between childhood-onset FA (COFA) and adult-onset FA (AOFA) are not known.
Objective: To identify phenotypic and QoL differences between AOFA and COFA.
Curr Opin Allergy Clin Immunol
August 2016
Purpose Of Review: The most recent recommendations for the management of both acute (ARS) and chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) based on the strongest data available for each treatment modality are summarized in this review. The clinical relationships between CRS and its comorbidities are also discussed.
Recent Findings: The most promising advances in rhinosinusitis management involve the use of mAbs (anti-IgE, anti-IL-5, anti-IL-4Rα) in trials of CRS with nasal polyposis.
Background: Identification of factors adversely affecting the utility of allergy skin testing is important in optimizing patient care. Inpatient penicillin skin test data from 1997 through 2007 demonstrate that up to 20% of attempted penicillin skin tests are indeterminate owing to a negative histamine test response, despite exclusion of H1 antagonists. Critical illness, vasopressors, steroid use, and psychotropic medications have been postulated to influence outcomes, but large studies are lacking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFailure of apoptosis has been postulated to cause the hypercellularity and thus excess scar-tissue formation of hypertrophic scars (HTS). Here, we have examined the susceptibility of fibroblasts derived from normal or HTS to apoptosis induced during collagen-gel contraction, a wound-healing model. Normal scar (NS) fibroblasts underwent significant apoptosis (>40% total) in contractile collagen, whereas apoptosis was not detected in HTS cells.
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