Pediatr Allergy Immunol Pulmonol
June 2016
Fish allergy represents a persistent allergic disorder that usually does not improve spontaneously. Because neither fully effective therapeutic strategy nor truly curative approaches are currently available for food allergy, we report herein a case of fish allergy in a 11-year-old male patient treated with Oral Immunotherapy (OIT). The patient at the age of 4 years, for the first time, experienced immediate urticaria and angioedema, rhinitis, cough, and dyspnea after ingestion of both salmon and codfish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: clinical and biochemical picture of hyperthyroidism in children may significantly change according to its etiologies.
Objectives: to report the most recent views about epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical and biochemical course, diagnostic procedures and management of hyperthyroid syndrome in childhood, according to its different etiologies.
Design: Graves' disease and Hashimoto's thyroiditis are responsible for 84% and 12%, respectively, of all the cases of hyperthyroidism in childhood.
Aim: to report the salient literature news concerning the relationships between thyroid function presenting patterns and subsequent biochemical evolution of Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT) in pediatric age.
Design: the most recent reports from pediatric literature concerning biochemical thyroid function patterns at HT presentation and their spontaneous changes over time were analyzed and shortly commented.
Results: from the analysis of pediatric literature on this theme, it emerges that HT in children may present with a very heterogeneous biochemical picture ranging from overt hypothyroidism to overt hyperthyroidism.