Type:
Whole Allergen
Whole Allergen
Whole Allergen
Silk waste
k73
Silk waste
Silk threads to be used for the production of fabrics go through several processes that remove allergenic proteins. The silk waste, however, is less carefully processed and retains allergens of the original sources. Silk is a well-known occupational allergy in silk-industry workers (1). Silk waste from wild silk has become an important indoor inhalant allergen due to its use for filling bed quilts and pillows (2-5).
Silk is produced from the cocoons of silk moths. Cultivated mulberry silk (Bombyx mori) and wild silk (Antheraea spp), also called oak-leaf silk or tussah, are the major types. Silk fibres, up to several hundred meters long, are rolled off each cocoon after an initial heating step to kill the pupae. Both types of fibres consist of fibroin, a fibrous protein, and sericin, a sticky proteinaceous material, that holds the fibres together. By-products from the silk production, end-parts of cocoons, short fibres, etc, are combined to form silk waste and are utilized as filling material for e.g. bed quilts and winter clothes.
Silk threads to be used for the production of fabrics go through several processes that remove allergenic proteins. The silk waste, however, is less carefully processed and retains allergens of the original sources.
Silk is a well-known occupational allergy in silk-industry workers (1). Silk waste from wild silk has become an important indoor inhalant allergen due to its use for filling bed quilts and pillows (2-5). IgE antibodies against silk waste (k73) were found in 99% of 111 patients with immediate type reactions to silk (4). Mulberry silk may also be included in silk waste (3, 4, 6). IgE antibodies were detected in 38/45 (84%) asthmatics with symptoms in the winter season (6).
A Chinese silk waste product intended for filling bed matresses and rugs was shown to contain several IgE-binding allergens in the range 14 to 70 kD (7). Silk allergens may share epitopes with the dust from silk-moth wings and possibly with other insects (8).
Elimination of the allergen source from the patient's environment is an effective treatment that leads to complete recovery from the respiratory symptoms (9).
Silk allergens may share epitopes with the dust from silk-moth wings and possibly with other insects (8).
Last reviewed : June 2022