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Vol. 31. Issue 1.
Pages 56 (January 2003)
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Vol. 31. Issue 1.
Pages 56 (January 2003)
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Autoinmune hepatitis and odour of a fish food proteins
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Joseph Prandotaa
a Department of Public Health, University Medical School
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Dear Sir:

Recently we presented a case of 15-year-old boy with classic (type 1) autoimmune hepatitis presumably caused by a long-term exposure to the strong odour of food fed to a large number of tropical fish which the boy kept in tanks in his bedroom1.

Since then we found several publications being in concert with our reasoning presented in this paper2-9. All these reports confirm that tropical fishes are not suitable pets for allergic person2 because some ingredients of pet-fish food are known triggers of type I and type III allergy which may induce "aquarium" allergy. For example, bronchial asthma may be caused by polyvalent sensitization to various components in fish food, such as dried daphnia3-5. Pet-fish food lung - a new form of extrinsic allergic alveolitis have also been reported6. In this female patient, bronchioloalveolar lavage yielded a highly active lymphocytic alveolitis with a CD4+/CD8+ ratio of 0.8, and serum precipitins directed against two commercially available pet-fish food were detected by counter-immunoelectrophoresis6. Allergic reactions associated with inhalation of fish odours or fumes are IgE-mediated7, and IgE antibodies induced by aeroallergens recognize structurally similar components in certain foods even from taxonomically unrelated plants8. Recently, it was suggested that there are likely to be organ-specific disease susceptibility genes, which together with general atopy genes target the allergic response to specific mucosal tissue9.

All these literature data may support our suggestion that odour of fish food proteins may be responsible for triggering autoimmune hepatitis in our patient exposed for several months to sharp odour of fish food proteins.

Joseph Prandota, MD, PhD

Professor of Pediatrics & Clinical Pharmacology

Department of Public Health, University Medical School

23 Worcella St., 50-445 Wroclaw, Poland

Tel/fax 48-71-343-20-86

E-mail: dalkaz@poczta.onet.pl

Bibliography
[1]
Prandota J..
Autoimmune hepatitis associated with the odour of a fish food proteins: A causal relationship or just a mere association?..
Allergol et Immunopathol, 30 (2002), pp. 331-7
[2]
Majamaa H, Vaalasti A..
Tropical fishes suitable pets for an allergic person?.
Duodecim, 115 (1999), pp. 1229-30
[3]
Knusel J, Wuthrich B:..
Schweiz Med Wochenschr, 113 (1983), pp. 658-62
[4]
Dietschi R, Wuthrich B:..
Hautarzt, 38 (1987), pp. 160-1
[5]
Meister W: Bronchial asthma following Daphnia allergy..
Z Erkr Atmungsorgane, 158 (1982), pp. 319-21
[6]
Woltsche M, Woltsche-Kahr I, Roger GM, Kaiba T, Aberer W, Popper H: Pet-fish food lung- a new form of extrinsic allergic alveolitis..
Eur J Med Res, 5 (2000), pp. 122-3
[7]
Morrow Brown H, Merrett J, Merrett TG: Fish food allergy..
Allergy, 55 (2000), pp. 901-2
[8]
Helbling A: Food allergy..
Most often conceals an inhalational allergy..
Schweiz Rundsch Med Prax, 87 (1998), pp. 1309-15
[9]
Nishimura A, Campbell-Meltzer RS, Chute K, Orrell J, Ono SJ: Genetics of allergic disease: evidence for organ-specific susceptibility genes..
Int Arch Allergy Immunol, 124 (2001), pp. 197-200
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