Prevalence of various types of allergens in ocular allergic conditions of patients from Pokhara, Nepal

Authors

  • Sachet Prabhat Shrestha Department of Ophthalmology, MCOMS, Pokhara
  • Amod K Pokhrel Department of Environmental Health Sciences, University of California Berkeley, California
  • Pushpa Malla National Tuberculosis and Chest Diseases
  • Srijana Thapa Godar Department of Ophthalmology, MCOMS, Pokhara

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/nepjoph.v6i1.10759

Keywords:

Ocular allergy AKC, VKC, SAC, PAC, skin prick test (SPT), allergen, , specific immune therapy (SIT)

Abstract

Introduction: Ocular allergic conditions are mostly recurrent and the drugs prescribed, especially corticosteroids, have serious side effects. Therefore, when maximal tolerated topical and systemic medications are unable to control allergic conjunctivitis, a skin prick test for allergens should be conducted and patients should be taught to avoid these allergens.

Objective: To find out the prevalence of common allergens inciting ocular allergic diseases in Nepal.

Subjects and methods: A total of 13,376 skin prick tests were performed on 76 patients suffering from different chronic recurrent ocular allergic conjunctivitis with 176 common allergens (pollens, fungi, insects, dusts, danders, fabrics/ feathers, food, parthenium leaves, tobacco and mite). Buffer saline was used as a negative control while histamine acid phosphate was used as a positive control. Grading of the skin prick test reaction was done by comparison to the histamine positive control. Only markedly positive reactions were considered positive. Relevant data were entered into the excel spreadsheet and analyzed with the Stata-12 commercial package. The association between allergic conditions and socio-demographic, environmental and other co-variates were tested by the chi-square test.

Results: The common offenders found in the study were mite (42.11 %) followed by fabrics/ feathers (20.39 %), dusts (18.18 %), pollen (17.05 %), non-juicy food (15.02 %), dander (13.60 %), juicy food (11.64 %) and fungus (9.87 %), and tobacco (6.58 %), parthenium leaves (5.26 %) and insects (3.17 %) were less common offenders.

Conclusions: All ocular allergy patients should undergo skin prick tests to find out the allergens causing their allergy and then receive specific immunological treatment (SIT).

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3126/nepjoph.v6i1.10759

Nepal J Ophthalmol 2014; 6 (2): 6-23

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Published

2014-07-16

How to Cite

Shrestha, S. P., Pokhrel, A. K., Malla, P., & Godar, S. T. (2014). Prevalence of various types of allergens in ocular allergic conditions of patients from Pokhara, Nepal. Nepalese Journal of Ophthalmology, 6(1), 6–23. https://doi.org/10.3126/nepjoph.v6i1.10759

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Section

Original Articles