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Cross-reactivity and masqueraders in seafood reactions

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Confounding variables play a significant role in many adverse seafood reactions and a clear understanding of these factors is important in properly characterizing reactions associated with potential masqueraders and mimics. Although the medical literature is replete with reviews of seafood hypersensitivity and reports of cross-reactive and newly characterized allergens, there has not been a recent effort to provide an updated overview of the several processes that may lead clinicians to draw incorrect conclusions in evaluating reported reactions to seafood. Ranging from seafood intoxications to other nonallergic or complex seafood reactions, these events can easily be misconstrued as representing a seafood IgE-mediated allergy. Among these are the more familiar topics of cross-reactivity and scombroid intoxication, and those with a still evolving understanding such as ciguatera fish poisoning and Anisakis reactions. This article seeks to provide an accessible but comprehensive summary of the relevant information surrounding these confounders in assessing adverse reactions to seafood. Such knowledge may be instrumental in unraveling complex or otherwise unclear presentations and aid clinicians in accurately evaluating and managing patients with reported seafood reactions.

Keywords: Anisakis; ciguatera fish poisoning; complex seafood reactions; non-IgE‐mediated seafood reactions; nonallergic seafood reactions; scombroid; seafood allergy; seafood cross-reactivity; seafood intoxication; seafood toxins

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: Allergy and Immunology, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland, USA

Publication date: 01 November 2013

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