19 results match your criteria: "Mother Theresa School of Medicine[Affiliation]"
Front Allergy
July 2024
College of Biomedical Sciences, Larkin University, Miami, FL, United States.
Pediatr Allergy Immunol
April 2024
Department of Pediatrics & Child Health, Director MRC Unit on Child & Adolescent Health, Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Monitoring is a major component of asthma management in children. Regular monitoring allows for diagnosis confirmation, treatment optimization, and natural history review. Numerous factors that may affect disease activity and patient well-being need to be monitored: response and adherence to treatment, disease control, disease progression, comorbidities, quality of life, medication side-effects, allergen and irritant exposures, diet and more.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllergy
November 2021
Department of Pediatric Pneumonology and Allergy, Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland.
Microbiota composition and associated metabolic activities are essential for the education and development of a healthy immune system. Microbial dysbiosis, caused by risk factors such as diet, birth mode, or early infant antimicrobial therapy, is associated with the inception of allergic diseases. In turn, allergic diseases increase the risk for irrational use of antimicrobial therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Transl Allergy
September 2017
Allergy and Respiratory Research Group, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1186/s13601-016-0095-x.].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllergy
April 2018
Food Allergy Referral Centre Veneto Region Department of Women and Child Health, Padua General University Hospital, Padua, Italy.
Hymenoptera venom allergy is a potentially life-threatening allergic reaction following a honeybee, vespid, or ant sting. Systemic-allergic sting reactions have been reported in up to 7.5% of adults and up to 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllergy
March 2017
Allergy and Respiratory Research Group, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Background: The European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI) is in the process of developing the EAACI Guidelines on Allergen Immunotherapy (AIT) for the management of insect venom allergy. To inform this process, we sought to assess the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and safety of AIT in the management of insect venom allergy.
Methods: We undertook a systematic review, which involved searching 15 international biomedical databases for published and unpublished evidence.
Clin Transl Allergy
February 2016
Allergy and Respiratory Research Group, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Background: The European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI) is in the process of developing the EAACI Guidelines for Allergen Immunotherapy (AIT) for the Management of Insect Venom Allergy. We seek to critically assess the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and safety of AIT in the management of insect venom allergy.
Methods: We will undertake a systematic review, which will involve searching international biomedical databases for published, in progress and unpublished evidence.
Clin Rev Allergy Immunol
February 2016
Hygeia Hospital Tirana, Outpatients Service, Allergology Consulting Room, Tirana, Albania.
The interleukin-10 (IL-10) is generally considered as the most important cytokine with anti-inflammatory properties and one of the key cytokines preventing inflammation-mediated tissue damage. In this respect, IL-10 producing cells play a crucial role in the outcome of infections, allergy, autoimmune reactions, tumor development, and transplant tolerance. Based on recent findings with regard to the mentioned clinical conditions, this review attempts to shed some light on the IL-10 functions, considering this cytokine as inherent inducer of the switching immunity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Rev Allergy Immunol
August 2014
Department of Allergology and Clinical Immunology, "Mother Theresa" School of Medicine, Tirana, Albania,
This review includes a variety of extremely rare and unusual hymenoptera sting (HS) circumstances with regard to sting localization, geographic region, massivity of multiple stings, and particularly related to clinical symptoms. Such reactions occur in a temporal relationship to HS (s), differ from typical allergic symptomatology, and sometimes need follow-up during many months. With respect to pathogenesis, the major mechanisms involved are toxic, autoimmune, and other delayed immunological ones.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Investig Allergol Clin Immunol
March 2014
Mother Theresa School of Medicine, Department of Allergology and Clinical Immunology, Tirana, Albania.
Episodic hemorrhage is not a typical symptom of anaphylactic reaction to insect stings. Cases of reactions to honeybee (HB) sting or venom immunotherapy in which the uterus is the main target organ are very rare. Hemorrhage can be induced by HB venom components, especially melittin, which interfere with complement cleavage and bradykinin release.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Case Rep
December 2011
Department of Allergology and Clinical Immunology, Mother Theresa School of Medicine, Tirana, Albania.
Gluten intolerance is an autoimmune enteropathy caused by heterogeneous mixture of wheat storage proteins. Malabsorption symptoms imply diarrhoea, abdominal pain/bloating and weight loss. This case describes a 22-year-old female subject, who had chronic headache, joint pain, urticaria and long period of amenorrhea.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Occup Med Toxicol
November 2008
Dept, of Allergology & Clinical Immunology, "Mother Theresa" School of Medicine - Tirana, Albania.
Background: Isocyanates are extensively used in the manufacture of polyurethane foams, plastics, coatings or adhesives. They are a major cause of occupational asthma in a proportion of exposed workers. Recent findings in animal models have demonstrated that isocyanate-induced asthma does not always represent an IgE-mediated sensitization, but still a mixed profile of CD4+ Th1 and TH2, as well as a CD8+ immune response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Investig Allergol Clin Immunol
October 2008
Department of Allergology, Mother Theresa School of Medicine, Tirana, Albania.
Background And Objective: Having relatives with allergic disease is associated with an increased risk of such disease, but children without a significant genetic predisposition account for much of the increase in asthma prevalence. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the prevalence of a reported family history of allergy has increased among atopic respiratory patients diagnosed in Outpatient Service No. 3 in Tirana in recent decades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Hypotheses
May 2008
Mother Theresa School of Medicine, Department of Allergology and Clinical Immunology, Rruga Myslym Shyri, P. 47, Ap. 15 Tirana, Albania.
Eosinophils are multifunctional cells, which contain and produce many biologically active substances. Generally, eosinophilia is associated with parasitic infections or allergic disorders, while according to recent studies eosinophil infiltration is also present in target tissues of both physiological and pathological processes, such as angiogenesis, embryogenesis, immune regulation, different infections or neoplasies, leading to tissue damage or remodeling. Reflecting on prognosis improvement in the case of solid tumors after eosinophilic infiltration of their capsules, it could be hypothesized that eosinophils are not tumoricidal per se; rather they can perforate such barriers through their vesicles' content, whereas the tumoricidal cytokines such as interleukin 4 (IL-4) fulfill the tumoral necrosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Hypotheses
April 2007
Mother Theresa School of Medicine, Department of Allergology and Clinical Immunology, Rruga Myslym Shyri, Pall. 47, Apt. 15, Tirana, Albania.
Common respiratory infections usually show a latent incubation period, followed by an acute stage. Finally, due to new synthesis of specific antibodies, the relative microorganisms undergo a massive eradication from hostile organism. Meanwhile, clinical symptoms induced by innate immunity mechanisms during these pathologies are assumed properly as host attempts for the expulsion of infectious agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Hypotheses
August 2006
Mother Theresa School of Medicine, Rruga Myslym Shyri, No. 47, Ap. 15, Tirana, Albania.
Allergic reactions caused by hymenoptera venoms represent a major medical problem for certain groups of population. In addition to different anaphylaxis reactions, less frequent fatal cases have been recorded in Europe and USA. It has been observed that generally, following the initial anaphylaxis reaction to the venom of such insects, milder and less frequent successive reactions occur in children than in adults, though the latter are less frequently stung.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllergy
April 2006
Department of Allergology, Mother Theresa School of Medicine, Tirana, Albania.
The ability of common environmental allergens to stimulate IgE responses and thus to produce allergic diseases has tended to overshadow the fact that helminthic parasites are possibly the most potent inducers of this immunoglobulin that exists in nature. Although it has been well established that during these infections there is a stimulation of IgE against their own antigens as well as a strong induction of nonspecific TH2/IL-4 polyclonal IgE, similarly to the allergic processes, many authors debate if the presence of these infections correlates inversely or not with the rate prevalence of atopy or respiratory allergy. Interpreting this relationship, we suggest that sometimes the intensive infections of hosts, especially with soil helminths which migrate in the respiratory ways or use there as entrance, can induce the production of some mediators ('helminth(k)ines'), to reduce the possibility of their reactive expulsion from the host.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Investig Allergol Clin Immunol
May 2004
Dept. of Allergology, Mother Theresa School of Medicine, University of Tirana, Tirana, Albania.
Background: Relatively few studies have examined the relation of different hymenoptera sting reactions.
Objective: To investigate the relation of anaphylactic reactions against stings of different hymenoptera subspecies in the Mediterranean population of Albania.
Materials And Methods: A retrospective study was conducted using the clinic files of 111 patients who were diagnosed for hymenoptera sting reactions from 1987 to 1996.
BMC Dermatol
August 2002
Dept. of Allergy, Mother Theresa School of Medicine, University of Tirana, Tirana, Albania.
Background: Severe allergic reactions during rush-specific immunotherapy (Rush-SIT) may occur in the treatment of hymenoptera sting allergy. The objective of the present study was to examine the characteristics of allergic reactions during Rush-SIT in a cohort of patients with allergy towards hymenoptera venom in the mediterranean population of Albania.
Methods: A retrospective study was performed using the clinical reports of 37 patients with venom of bee (apinae), wasp (vespidae, subfamily vespinae) or paperwasp (vespidae, subfamily polistinae) allergy treated with Rush-SIT between 1987 and 1996.