Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
What affects allergen-specific IgE blood levels in cats
By Belova, S et al.·Published in Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire·2012·Department of Therapy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Factors affecting allergen-specific IgE serum levels in cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats with itchy skin were tested for specific allergens to see if their IgE levels could help diagnose the cause of their itching. The study found that older cats, those who lived outdoors, and those without flea control or deworming had higher IgE levels. However, measuring these IgE levels wasn't a reliable way to diagnose allergies to food or environmental factors. It was effective for diagnosing flea bite hypersensitivity, meaning that if your cat is itching, it’s important to consider flea treatment as a possible solution.
People also search for: cat itchy skin treatment · cat allergy testing · flea bite hypersensitivity in cats
Abstract
Pruritic skin diseases are common in cats and demand rigorous diagnostic workup for finding an underlying etiology. Measurement of a serum allergen-specific IgE in a pruritic cat is often used to make or confirm the diagnosis of a skin hypersensitivity disease, although current evidence suggests that elevated allergen-specific IgE do not always correlate with a clinical disease and vice versa. The aim of the study was to to assess the possible influence of age, deworming status, lifestyle, flea treatment, and gender on allergen-specific IgE levels and to evaluate the reliability of IgE testing in predicting the final diagnosis of a pruritic cat. For this purpose sera of 179 cats with pruritus of different causes and 20 healthy cats were evaluated for allergen-specific IgE against environmental, food and flea allergens using the Fc-epsilon receptor based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test. The results of the study showed positive correlation between age, outdoor life style, absence of deworming, absence of flea control measures and levels of allergen-specific IgE. Gender and living area (urban versus rural) did not seem to affect the formation of allergen-specific IgE. According to these findings, evaluating allergen-specific IgE levels, is not a reliable test to diagnose hypersensitivity to food or environmental allergens in cats. On the contrary, this test can be successfully used for diagnosing feline flea bite hypersensitivity.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22754094/