Basal serum tryptase level correlates with severity of hymenoptera sting and age.

J Investig Allergol Clin Immunol

Department of Allergology and Internal Medicine, Medical University of Bialystok, Bialystok, Poland.

Published: June 2007

Background: Increased serum tryptase has been linked to the severity of the reaction after Hymenoptera stings. The aim of the study was to measure basal tryptase levels in patients with Hymenoptera venom allergy and investigate the possible correlation between these levels and the severity of sting reaction.

Methods: One hundred nine patients were included in the study. Sixty-three were wasp venom-allergic and 46 were honey bee venom-allergic. Basal serum tryptase levels were measured by UniCAP.

Results: Basal serum tryptase levels were elevated in 12 (11%) of the 109 patients. Levels were 5.14 pg/L (3.62-5.84), 5.3 microg/L (2.94-6.54), 5.18 microg/L (3.71-6.25), and 6.98 microg/L (4.78-12.6), for patients with sting reactions of grade I, II, III and IV (as classified by Mueller), respectively. Basal serum tryptase levels correlated significantly with the sting reaction severity (r = 0.2752; P = .004) and with age (r = 0.2906; P = .002). Sting reaction severity also correlated with age (r = 0.3654; P = .001).

Conclusions: Basal serum tryptase levels were found to be elevated in 11% of venom allergic patients and correlated significantly with both sting reaction severity and age.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

serum tryptase
24
basal serum
20
tryptase levels
20
sting reaction
12
reaction severity
12
levels elevated
8
elevated 11%
8
correlated sting
8
tryptase
7
levels
7

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!