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The distribution of dust mite allergen in the houses of patients with asthma.

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TLDR
The results suggested that natural exposure to this dust allergen allows occasional fecal particles to enter the lungs and that these particles contain very concentrated allerGEN.
Abstract
Using an inhibition radioimmunoassay for the major allergen from Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (antigen P1), we studied the distribution of this dust allergen in the houses of patients with asthma. Both bed and floor dust samples contained a wide range of antigen P1, 100 to 100,000 ng/g of fine dust, and this concentration correlated well with the number of mite bodies (r = 0.81, p less than 0.001). We were unable to detect antigen P1 in the air of undisturbed rooms. However, during domestic activity, between 1 and 30 ng were collected on a filter than sampled air for 45 min at 17 L/min. Using a cascade impactor it was shown that greater than 80% of the airborne antigen P1 was associated with particles greater than 10 mu in diameter. Some of the particles containing allergen could be identified because they formed precipitin rings when impacted onto agarose containing rabbit antimite antiserum. These particles had the physical appearance of mite feces, which are the major source of antigen P1 in mite cultures. The results suggested that natural exposure to this dust allergen allows occasional fecal particles to enter the lungs and that these particles contain very concentrated allergen.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Limitations of a Home Characteristics Questionnaire as a Predictor of Indoor Allergen Levels

TL;DR: Home characteristics reporting is a relatively weak predictor of the absence of allergen, and exposure can occur even when no cats is present, beds are encased in plastic, no carpets are present, and no signs of cockroaches have been reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlations between levels of mite and cat allergens in settled and airborne dust.

TL;DR: Thirty homes in Rochester, Minn., 20 of which housed cats, were studied to compare cat and mite allergen concentrations in airborne and settled dust, indicating that some houses in Minnesota have concentrations of mite allergens high enough to cause allergic disease, even in the winter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Allergens and their role in the allergic immune response

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the characteristics of these exposures that favor the production of this form of response and identify the factors that may influence the response, such as enhanced production of interleukin-10 in response to specific Fel d 1 peptides.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mite faeces are a major source of house dust allergens

TL;DR: Measurements from a radioimmunoassay show that more than 95% of the allergen accumulating in mite cultures is associated with faecal particles.
Journal ArticleDOI

The house-dust mite (Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus) and the allergens it produces. Identity with the house-dust allergen

TL;DR: The finding of the house-dust mite seems to supply an answer to all factors, and the keystone of the theory is formed by the fact that after being made equivalent, extracts of house dust and mite cultures gave skin reactions which were both qualitatively and quantitatively indistinguishable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mites and house-dust allergy in bronchial asthma

TL;DR: The mites in a large number of dust samples from houses of patients with bronchial asthma were identified and counted: the most common species was Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, and it was particularly abundant in mattress dust.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of anti-mite measures on children with mite-sensitive asthma: a controlled trial.

TL;DR: Mite counts and tests for mite antigen were performed on samples of dust taken from the bedding of 53 children with mite-sensitive asthma and no significant differences emerged in the progress of the two groups, both tending to improve.
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