2009
DOI: 10.3390/medicina45020013
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Significance of dietotherapy on the clinical course of atopic dermatitis

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Like many of the trials, a lack of controls and blinding and the significant number of originally recruited patients (25 of 91) from whom adequate data could not be collected limited this study. In a larger study, 154 children with AD underwent a 1‐year individualized elimination diet based on patch and prick testing . The elimination diet significantly reduced the number of allergic rashes, significantly decreased medication use, and significantly improved the clinical course as evaluated by SCORAD and patient subjective assessments, but in addition to the usual limitations, this study was limited by the large proportion (29%) of participants lost to follow‐up.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Like many of the trials, a lack of controls and blinding and the significant number of originally recruited patients (25 of 91) from whom adequate data could not be collected limited this study. In a larger study, 154 children with AD underwent a 1‐year individualized elimination diet based on patch and prick testing . The elimination diet significantly reduced the number of allergic rashes, significantly decreased medication use, and significantly improved the clinical course as evaluated by SCORAD and patient subjective assessments, but in addition to the usual limitations, this study was limited by the large proportion (29%) of participants lost to follow‐up.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among the 36 children with chronic constipation, 14 were had milk intolerance and three had multiple food intolerance [22]. Rokaite et al [23] showed that 80% children with atopic dermatitis had food allergies, and 63.4% complained of gastrointestinal diseases, most commonly constipation. Studies on the relationship between allergic diseases and constipation mostly focused on infants and young children and food allergens, especially milk.…”
Section: Discussion/conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 1996, Isolauri first reported that a combined skin prick and patch test enhances the diagnosis of food allergy in AD infants [59]. Rokaite found that positive skin patch test is most often found in children from 6 months to 7 years of age [57]. Darso reported a European multicenter study showed that the APT had a higher specificity than SPT or specific serum IgE [60].…”
Section: Atopic Patch Test (Apt)mentioning
confidence: 98%
“…When there is neither elevated level of IgE nor positive skin prick test, food allergy should be further investigated by making a patch test [57]. Moreover, for wheat allergy, for which measurement of specific IgE and SPT gives unsatisfactory results, the APT proved to be the most reliable test, and the positive predictive value of 94% could not be improved by a combination with other allergy tests [58].…”
Section: Atopic Patch Test (Apt)mentioning
confidence: 98%