Statistical Characteristics of Patients Reporting
for Clinical Check-up with Suspected Food Allergy
Györgyi Pátkai 1, Kristóf Nékám2, and Beáta Székely-Szilágyi1
1 Department of Canning Technology, Faculty of Food Science, Szent István University, Szeged, Hungary
2 Department of Clinical Immunology and Allergology of the Hospital of the Hospitaller Brothers of St John of God in Buda, Budapest, Hungary
Corresponding author: Györgyi Pátkai
Department of Canning Technology
Faculty of Food Science
Szent István University,
Ménesi út 45.
H-1118 Budapest, Hungary
Telephone: +36-1-3726-212
Fax number: +36-1-3726-327
E-mail address: gypatkai@omega.kee.hu
CEJOEM 2002, Vol.8. No.2–3.:188–193
Key words:
Food allergens, symptoms, dietary habits, cross reactivity, actual and presumed allergy
Abstract:
The data of 3000 patients at the Department of Clinical Immunology and Allergology of the
Hospital of the Hospitaller Brothers of St John of God in Buda, Budapest, were analyzed, with the
aim of determining the percentage of patients with proven food allergy, the distribution of
patients with suspected food allergy according to their age, sex and symptoms, and to study some
factors influencing food allergy. Most frequent types of food allergy resulting from cross
reactivity with pollens were also investigated. The main results of the survey were the following:
in the years 2000–2001 only in 4.3% of the 3000 patients being checked up in the Hospital had an
actual food allergy been proven. The predominant majority of the patients suffering from food
allergy (76%) were women. The age of the majority of women having food allergy was between 20–40
years while men suffering from the same disease were younger, mostly 20–30 years old. In 81% of the
patients admitted with suspected food allergy, the diagnosis was proven by double blind
placebo-controlled food challenges (DBPCFC). Significantly more women judged their symptoms
correctly, men were more frequently wrong. In accordance with the literature in the present survey
it was found that tomato, soybean and celery are the main food allergens of vegetable origin in
the Hungarian adult population, cross-reacting with pollen structures.
Received: 3 July 2002
Accepted: 25 November 2002
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