Salicylate Food Intolerance and Aspirin Hypersensitivity in Nasal Polyposis

Authors

  • Elmira Esmaeilzadeh Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Rheumatology,Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran
  • Mohammad Faramarzi Otolaryngology Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran
  • Mohammad Farhadi 6ENT–Head and Neck Surgery Research Center, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  • Mohammad Nabavi Department of Allergy and Immunology, Rasool-e-Akram Hospital,Tehran, Iran
Abstract:

Background: A clear association between allergy and nasal polyposis (NP) is not determined and the role of food intolerance in patients with NP is not investigated by oral food challenge (OFC). Objective: To investigate the relation of salicylate food intolerance and atopy in patients with NP according to recurrence and aspirin sensitivity. Methods: A cross sectional multicenter study was done in two tertiary centers for allergy in Iran. Adult patients with NP were selected for the study that had been referred to allergy clinics. The oral aspirin challenge (OAC) test was performed to identify aspirin exacerbated respiratory disease (AERD) and the OFC test was used to investigate food intolerance. Atopic evaluation was performed by skin-prick tests, nasal smear and blood eosinophil count as well as serum total IgE. Results: One hundred and nineteen Iranian patients (female to male ratio 1.05) with NP were enrolled (mean age, 38 ± 11 years). Recurrence of nasal polyposis was 64.7%. OAC was performed in all cases; 43.79% cases had aspirin hypersensitivity. In addition, OFC tests determined that 69.9% of patients had salicylate food allergy. Salicylate food intolerance was significantly higher in NP cases with AERD than in aspirin tolerant patients (p

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Journal title

volume 14  issue 1

pages  81- 88

publication date 2017-03-01

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