Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Comparing rapid and full allergy blood tests in healthy and itchy cats
By Diesel, Alison & DeBoer, Douglas J·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2011·Department of Medical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Serum allergen-specific immunoglobulin E in atopic and healthy cats: comparison of a rapid screening immunoassay and complete-panel analysis.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats with skin itching and irritation were tested for allergies using two different blood tests to see how well they worked. The tests looked for specific antibodies that indicate allergies, but neither test alone could definitively diagnose allergic skin disease. However, the results from both tests were very similar, suggesting that the quicker test could help predict the results of the more comprehensive one. This means that if your cat is showing signs of allergies, these tests can help guide your veterinarian in understanding what might be causing the problem.
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Abstract
Feline and canine atopic dermatitis are thought to have a similar immunopathogenesis. As with dogs, detection of allergen-specific IgE in cat serum merely supports a diagnosis of feline atopy based on compatible history, clinical signs and elimination of other pruritic dermatoses. In this study, a rapid screening immunoassay (Allercept(®) E-Screen 2nd Generation; Heska AG, Fribourg, Switzerland; ES2G) was compared with a complete-panel serum allergen-specific IgE assay (Allercept(®); Heska AG; CP) in healthy cats with no history of skin disease and in atopic cats. The latter had no diagnosis of external parasitism, infection, food hypersensitivity or other skin disease explaining their pruritus, and expressed cutaneous reaction patterns typically associated with feline allergic skin disease (head, neck or pinnal pruritus, miliary dermatitis, self-induced alopecia, eosinophilic granuloma complex). The proportion of cats positive on either the ES2G or the CP assays was not significantly different between the atopic and healthy cat groups. There was, however, strong agreement between the results of the ES2G and CP assay; overall, the two tests were in agreement for 43 of 49 (88%) serum samples. There was also strong agreement when individual allergen groups were evaluated (agreement noted: indoor, 41 of 49 samples; grasses/weeds, 37 of 49 samples; and trees, 41 of 49 samples). These results indicate that although neither test is diagnostic for feline atopic dermatitis, the screening assay is beneficial for predicting the results of a complete-panel serum allergen-specific IgE assay in cats.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20584155/