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KevinMD.com, 2014

The importance of recognizing immunodeficiency

Parikh, Purvi
(Website)
CID: 1707092

Relationship between urine dichlorophenol levels and asthma morbidity

Jerschow, Elina; Parikh, Purvi; McGinn, Aileen P; de Vos, Gabriele; Jariwala, Sunit; Hudes, Golda; Rosenstreich, David
BACKGROUND: Chlorinated phenols are associated with atopic conditions, but it is not known whether they are associated with wheeze or asthma and whether atopy is involved in these associations. OBJECTIVES: To test the association between urine levels of 2 dichlorophenols (2,4- and 2,5-dichlorophenols) and asthma morbidity in atopic and nonatopic wheezers and between total serum immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels. METHODS: Data from a sample of 2,125 participants at least 6 years old from the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2005 to 2006 were analyzed. Asthma morbidity data were available for those participants who reported wheezing in the past year ("wheezers"; n = 250). This subsample was categorized as atopic or nonatopic. RESULTS: Atopic wheezers with higher 2,5-dichlorophenol levels were more frequently diagnosed with asthma by a physician (odds ratio [OR] 4.7 for highest vs lowest tertile, P < .001), required more prescriptions for asthma medications (OR 2.2, P = .046), and reported more exercise-induced wheezing (OR 5.8, P = .045) than atopic wheezers with low dichlorophenol levels. Atopic wheezers with higher 2,5- or 2,4-dichloropheonol levels also were more likely to miss work or school because of wheezing (OR 10.0, P < .001; OR 11.4, P < .01, respectively). In contrast, in nonatopic wheezers, there were no significant associations between dichlorophenol levels and asthma morbidity measurements. The 2 dichlorophenol metabolites were positively associated with increased serum IgE levels in the larger study sample. CONCLUSION: These findings indicate that in patients with atopy and a history of wheezing, asthma morbidity is associated with high urinary dichlorophenol levels. Increased urine dichlorophenol levels are associated with higher total serum IgE.
PMCID:4058323
PMID: 24726197
ISSN: 1534-4436
CID: 1707032

Resolution of an acute attack of idiopathic angioedema with ecallantide [Letter]

Dy, Tiffany Biason; Rasheed, Mariam; Parikh, Purvi; Bernstein, Larry
PMID: 23987203
ISSN: 1534-4436
CID: 1707042

Discordance between aeroallergen specific serum IgE and skin testing in children younger than 4 years

de Vos, Gabriele; Nazari, Ramin; Ferastraoaru, Denisa; Parikh, Purvi; Geliebter, Rebecca; Pichardo, Yikania; Wiznia, Andrew; Rosenstreich, David
BACKGROUND: Atopic sensitization to aeroallergens in early life has been found to be a strong risk factor for the development of persisting asthma in young children with recurrent wheeze. OBJECTIVE: To assess the yield of skin prick test (SPT) compared with allergen specific serum IgE (sIgE) testing at identifying aeroallergen sensitization in atopic children younger than 4 years. METHODS: Concordance between SPT and allergen-specific sIgE testing for 7 common aeroallergens was analyzed in 40 atopic inner-city children 18 to 48 months of age (mean [SD], 36 [9] months) with recurrent wheezing and family history of asthma and/or eczema. RESULTS: In 80% of children one or more allergen sensitizations would have been missed if only SPT had been performed, and in 38% of children one or more sensitizations would have been missed if only sIgE testing had been performed. Agreement between the SPT and sIgE test was fair for most allergens (kappa = -0.04 to 0.50), as was correlation between sIgE levels and SPT grade (rho = 0.21 to 0.55). Children with high total sIgE (>/=300 kU/L) were more likely to have positive sIgE test results, with negative corresponding SPT results (P = .02). CONCLUSION: Our study revealed a significant discordance between allergen-specific SPT and sIgE testing results for common aeroallergens, suggesting that both SPT and sIgE testing should be performed when diagnosing allergic sensitization in young children at high risk of asthma. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01028560.
PMCID:4529057
PMID: 23706713
ISSN: 1534-4436
CID: 1707052

Mannose-binding lectin deficiency in a patient with multiple opportunistic infections, strongyloidiasis, and spindle cell tumor [Letter]

Parikh, Purvi; Kooragayalu, Shravan; Jariwala, Sunit
PMID: 23352534
ISSN: 1534-4436
CID: 1707062

A case of explosive progression of hepatocellular carcinoma in a patient with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) [Case Report]

Gandhi, Kaushang; Parikh, Purvi; Aronow, Wilbert S; Desai, Harit; Amin, Harshad; Sharma, Mala; Rubinstein, Arye
OBJECTIVE: While it is well known that patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) are predisposed to various malignancies, primarily non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and gastric carcinomas, to our knowledge no cases of hepatocellular carcinoma have been reported in the absence of preexisting liver disease. METHOD AND RESULTS: We report a 50-year-old male patient with CVID with a B- and T-cell deficiency. The patient was on prophylactic intravenous gammaglobulin and had received several years earlier a course of rituximab for an autoimmune disorder. He had no history of hepatitis. The patient developed a rapidly progressing hepatocellular carcinoma within 3 to 4 weeks. CONCLUSIONS: Although patients with CVID are predisposed to malignancies such as lymphoma and adenocarcinoma of the stomach, rapidly progressive hepatocellular carcinoma in the absence of any preexisting liver disease has not been described.
PMID: 20473587
ISSN: 1941-6636
CID: 1707072