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. 2013 Jan;131(1):144-9.
doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2012.08.016. Epub 2012 Oct 2.

Platelet-activating factor, histamine, and tryptase levels in human anaphylaxis

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Platelet-activating factor, histamine, and tryptase levels in human anaphylaxis

Peter Vadas et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2013 Jan.

Abstract

Background: Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is an important mediator and correlates with anaphylaxis severity. How well PAF correlates with severity relative to histamine or tryptase is not known.

Objective: To analyze the levels of PAF, histamine, and tryptase as a function of severity in patients with acute allergic reactions.

Methods: PAF, histamine, and tryptase levels were measured in blood samples collected from 23 healthy volunteers and from 41 patients during acute allergic reactions. Reactions were stratified by severity from grade 1 (least severe) to grade 3 (most severe).

Results: Among the 3 reaction grades, there were significant differences by ANOVA for PAF (P < .0001). The proportion of elevated PAF values increased across severity groups (P = .0009). Increased PAF levels were observed in 20%, 66.7%, and 100% of the patients with grades 1, 2, and 3 allergic reactions, respectively. While the proportion of elevated histamine values increased from 40% to 57% to 70% across grades 1, 2, and 3, respectively, these were not significantly different (P = .40). For tryptase, the proportion of elevated values increased monotonically from 0 in grade 1 to 4.8% in grade 2 to 60% in grade 3 (P = .0002).

Conclusions: The PAF level was significantly elevated in proportion to the severity of acute allergic reactions. Whereas the PAF level was elevated in all patients with severe anaphylaxis, this was not true for either histamine or tryptase. Neither histamine nor tryptase showed as good correlations with severity scores as did PAF. These data are consistent with a pivotal role for PAF as a mediator of anaphylaxis.

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