Allergy Flashcards

1
Q

What is an allergy

A

The body’s immune system reacting to the presence of something

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2
Q

What is an intolerance

A

The direct impact of a specific food on the gut

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3
Q

What causes an immediate food allergy

A

It is an IgE mediated reaction

It is an inappropriate or excessive response

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4
Q

How long does an immediate food allergy take to present

A

Instant to 2 hours after eating

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5
Q

What causes a delayed onset allergic response

A

It is cell mediated rather than IgE - takes longer

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6
Q

How long does it take for a delayed onset allergy to present

A

It comes on hours after you eat

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7
Q

Lactose intolerance is common in children - true or false

A

False - it is uncommon

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8
Q

What causes lactose intolerance

A

Loss of the enzyme that breaks lactose down

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9
Q

Which conditions are associated with atopy

A

Asthma, eczema, hay fever, allergy

Associated with high IgE

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10
Q

List symptoms of an immediate IgE allergic response

A

Urticarial rash
Angioedema
Conjunctivitis
Can progress to anaphylaxis

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11
Q

How do you diagnose an immediate IgE food allergy

A

IgE blood levels and a skin prick test (histamine response)
Not great tests for screening - can come back high if just sensitised but not allergic

The true test for food allergy is actually eating the food - food challenge

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12
Q

When are you most likely to develop an allergy

A

Most common in childhood

Can occur at any time though

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13
Q

Avoiding the food makes you more likely to develop the allergy - true or false

A

True

Exposure is a good thing (except in anaphylaxis cases!)

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14
Q

How does anaphylaxis present

A
Pharyngeal/larygeal oedema
Bronchospasm  
Tachypnoea or wheeze
Hypotension or tachycardia
Skin and mucosal changes 
Eventual LOC
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15
Q

How do you treat anaphylaxis

A

In emergency cases you give an epi-pen which contains adrenaline
Vast majority do not actually need it
What they need is an anti-histamine asap

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16
Q

Anaphylaxis is the most common response to allergen exposure - true or false

A

False
It is actually quite rare
Rashes and sickness are much more common

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17
Q

How do you manage allergy

A
  • Avoid allergen (main one!)
    • Antihistamine +/- steroids
    • Adrenaline if severe
18
Q

How could immunotherapy be used to treat allergy

A

In trials in the UK for peanuts
Involves slow and controlled exposure to the allergen
Will not cure the allergy but protects you against accidental exposure
Only really useful in those with serious anaphylaxis as it can protect them from this

19
Q

Most children will grow out of an egg allergy - true or false

A

True

20
Q

Egg allergy is only in response to raw egg - true or false

A

False

Can be to raw or cooked

21
Q

How does egg allergy typically present

A

Often present with a rash or mouth symptoms following introduction to egg (common for babies to be given scrambled etc)

22
Q

Those with a peanut allergy often have an associated tree nut allergy - true or false

A

True

About 30% will have both

23
Q

Which specific allergy would you have a lower threshold for epipen use

A

Peanut allergy

Often severe

24
Q

Children often grow out of a peanut allergy - true or false

A

False

Less likely for a peanut allergy to go away

25
Q

What is oral allergy syndrome

A

When you get local allergy symptoms in the mouth after eating fruit but not on other exposure
You are allergic to the pollen on the skin of the fruit (commonly birch)
Skin or cook the fruit to avoid the reaction

26
Q

What is chronic urticaria

A

Repeated episodes of urticaria with no obvious trigger
Not an allergy - cutting out foods will not help
Can be associated with angioedema

27
Q

What can cause chronic urticaria

A

Some people experience it in response to a virus or even water

28
Q

Which food groups are common causes of delayed allergic reactions

A
  • Often to big food groups like dairy soya, fish or egg
29
Q

How does a delayed onset allergic reaction present

A

Gives you GI symptoms and makes you a bit miserable

Can also make existing eczema worse

30
Q

How can you diagnose a delayed onset food allergy

A

Only real way to test for it is to avoid the food for a period and see if symptoms improve

31
Q

How do you treat a delayed onset food allergy

A

You have to avoid the allergen

32
Q

Which allergy often coexists with a dairy allergy

A

Soya

33
Q

How does a cows milk protein allergy present

A

Usually in the first year of life

Miserable baby, soft green poos, sometimes blood present

34
Q

How do you treat a cows milk protein allergy

A

Avoid cows milk
Some babies can even react to dairy protein passed in breastmilk so mum has to avoid it too
Then try reintroducing after 1 year

35
Q

What is the most common cause of fatal food anaphylaxis

A

Peanuts and tree nuts

36
Q

What is the most common clinical manifestation of allergic reaction

A

Cutaneous reactions

37
Q

What occurs first in fatal anaphylaxis respiratory or cardiac arrest

A

Respiratory failure occurs first with secondary cardiac arrest

38
Q

What other allergy is often seen alongside cows milk allergy

A

Goats milk

>90% allergic to both

39
Q

What is the best method for diagnosing a peanut allergy

A

A physician-supervised oral food challenge is recognized as the best and most reliable method

40
Q

What is a biphasic allergic reaction

A

Where there is another reaction around 8 hours after the first (been reported up to 72hrs!)