Learn more about common allergic diseases, symptoms, management paradigms, and testing considerations.
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Learn more about common allergic diseases, symptoms, management paradigms, and testing considerations.
Is your patient a candidate for specific IgE testing?
Get detailed information on whole allergens and allergen components.
Ready to test a patient?
Eczema is a chronic skin condition that makes the skin red, dry, itchy, and cracked. Atopic dermatitis is the most common type of eczema. Also known as allergic eczema or atopic eczema, it affects approximately 20 percent of children and up to 3 percent of the adult population worldwide.1 It often develops in connection with other conditions, such as asthma and seasonal allergies.
In 90 percent of patients with food allergies plus eczema, their symptoms are triggered by milk, egg, peanut, wheat, soy, shrimp, and/or fish.2
Eczema has several aggravating factors and triggers, such as heat, perspiration, emotional stress, and exposure to certain chemicals, cigarette smoke, and cleaning solutions.3 There are also common allergens that may cause symptoms, including:3
How do you know if eczema is caused or made worse by allergies? Learn more about the benefits of blood testing.
Anyone at any age can experience symptoms of eczema, but no two people experience eczema the same way. It can comprise small or large patches (flare-ups) on any area of the body, but it usually starts on the face in infants and is often found in skin creases such as the back of the knees and inside of the elbows.
Mild symptoms include:
Severe symptoms may include pain, inflammation, cracking, and bleeding. You might have all of these symptoms or only a few, and you might have some flare-ups, or your symptoms could go away entirely.4
Eczema may also have psychological impacts:
Children suffering from eczema and their parents can lose up to two hours of sleep per night.7 Eczema is many things—frustrating, painful, annoying, stressful, exhausting—but it is not contagious.
There is no cure for eczema, but there are treatments.4 Depending on the individual’s age and eczema severity, these treatments include over-the-counter (OTC) remedies, prescription topical medications, phototherapy, immunosuppressants, and biologic drugs.4
For most types of eczema, managing flares comes down to these basics:4
Allergic disease may undergo dynamic changes over time, and the term "allergy march" is often used to describe this characteristic disease progression. Because allergies change over time, many people will outgrow allergies they’ve had and develop new ones. The allergy march, also called the allergic march or atopic march, is a specific way that allergy symptoms often progress in children.8
Allergic eczema is often the first step of the allergy march.9 Children with early onset eczema are three times more likely to develop allergen sensitization by the age of two.10 As the march continues, children are at increased risk to develop allergic rhinitis or asthma later in life.10-13
Recently, it has been further established via clinical and physiological means that psychological stress is a significant contributor to atopic dermatitis.14 In addition to identifying allergic triggers, it’s also important to recognize the triggers behind physiological and psychological stress to help manage eczema symptoms.
Eczema and psoriasis are two different diseases; however, sometimes it may be hard to tell the difference between the two conditions. Here are a few key differences:
With up to 70 percent of infants and young children with eczema having an underlying allergy that contributes to disease severity, healthcare providers can use specific IgE testing to enhance the diagnostic process and pinpoint those allergens that may be triggering eczema symptoms.16,17 The specific information gleaned from test results can also be used to develop a personalized treatment plan.
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