The influence of ethnicity, an atopic family history, and maternal ascariasis on cord blood serum IgE concentrations
Autor: | Diane Malherbe, Eugene Weinberg, H. De V. Heese, Matthias Haus, Paul C. Potter, Jane M. Hall |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 1988 |
Předmět: |
Hypersensitivity
Immediate Immunology Helminthiasis Black People Immunoglobulin E Umbilical cord White People Atopy Radioallergosorbent Test Pregnancy Ascariasis Immunopathology medicine Humans Immunology and Allergy Family history biology business.industry Osmolar Concentration Infant Newborn Fetal Blood medicine.disease Immunoglobulin A Pregnancy Complications medicine.anatomical_structure Cord blood biology.protein Female business |
Zdroj: | Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. 82:179-189 |
ISSN: | 0091-6749 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0091-6749(88)90997-9 |
Popis: | Raised concentrations of cord blood serum (CBs) IgE have previously been demonstrated to reflect a hereditary predisposition for atopy in First World, predominantly white populations. A cross-sectional study of 53 black, 52 white, and 58 mixed race newborn infants and maternal pairs was performed in a multiethnic, mixed First and Third World society. The CBs IgE concentrations were measured with a modification of the standard IgE PRIST, which could reliably determine IgE concentrations to an accuracy of 0.01 kU/L. The black group had the highest geometric mean and median CBs IgE concentrations (0.21; 0.16 kU/L), followed by the white group (0.12; 0.12 kU/L) and the mixed group (0.10; 0.08 kU/L). If those newborn infants with an atopic family history and maternal ascariasis were excluded, the remainder had geometric mean and median CBs IgE concentrations of 0.20; 0.16 kU/L in the black subgroup, followed by values of 0.06; 0.05 kU/L in the mixed subgroup, and 0.05; 0.07 kU/L in the white subgroup. Statistically significant ethnic differences in the median CBs IgE concentrations of these subgroups were demonstrated between the black-white (p less than 0.05) and the black-mixed (p less than 0.005) ethnic groups. A positive family history of atopy influenced the CBs IgE concentrations in the white and mixed groups but not in the black group. Of those newborn infants with a CBs IgE concentration greater than 0.5 kU/L, a family history of atopy was found in 100% of the white newborn infants, in 58.3% of the mixed newborn infants, and only in 14.3% of the black newborn infants. Many of the black newborn infants without a family history of atopy had extremely high CBs IgE concentrations. The influence of maternal ascariasis was equivocal in the mixed group but of no significance in the black group. The high CBs IgE concentrations in the black newborn infants, independent of an atopic family history and maternal ascariasis, suggest that this atopic marker may therefore be of limited use in identifying the "high allergic-risk" newborn infant in black Third World populations who appear to represent a pool of genetic high IgE-responder phenotypes. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |