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Pork-cat syndrome as cause of anaphylactic reaction to well-cooked meat / Síndrome gato-porco como causa de reação anafilática à carne cozida

Sangalho, Inês; Palma-Carlos, Susana; Pinto, Paula Leiria; Bartolomé, Borja.
Arq. Asma, Alerg. Imunol ; 7(1): 109-113, 20230300. ilus
Artículo en Inglés | LILACS | ID: biblio-1509641
Pork-cat syndrome is a rare clinical syndrome that can cause lifethreatening reactions. Occuring in patients allergic to cat dander, it involves cross-reactivity between cat and pig serum albumin. Cat allergy usually precedes food allergies, suggesting primary sensitization to cat serum albumin. Since these proteins are thermolabile, the reaction tends to be more severe in undercooked meat. A 27-year-old woman with persistent moderate-to-severe rhinoconjunctivitis since childhood reported 2 immediate mucocutaneous reactions after eating small amounts of pork. Skin prick tests with commercial extracts showed sensitization to pork, and prick-to-prick tests confirmed sensitization to raw pork and raw beef. Specific IgE was positive for pork, and ISAC microarray also showed sensitization to Fel d 2. SDS-PAGE and IgE immunoblotting assays were performed with raw and cooked pork extract and detected in a 60 kDa band. In the immunoblotting-inhibition assays, cat serum albumin completely inhibited IgE binding to pork extract. The patient underwent 2 oral food challenges with well-cooked pork and beef, both causing an anaphylactic reaction. The patient's history and in-vivo and in-vitro tests led to a diagnosis of pork-cat syndrome with clinical cross-reactivity to another mammalian serum albumin. This case should stimulate oral food challenges with other well-cooked mammalian meats in patients with this syndrome to establish a tolerance threshold and avoid possible unexpected anaphylactic reactions.

Asunto(s)

Humanos Femenino Adulto
Biblioteca responsable: BR2717.9