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A
54-year-old woman
suffered an episode
of dyspnea and edema
affecting her
eyelids, tongue, and
lips a few minutes
after intake of
Lizipaina
(bacitracin, papain,
and lysozyme).She
was treated with
intravenous drugs
and her symptoms
improved within 2
hours. She had
experiencedm 3 to 4
bouts of similar
symptoms related to
the ingestion of
cured cheeses or raw
egg. Specifi c serum
immunoglobulin (Ig)
E against lysozyme
was present at a
concentration of
0.45 kU/L, and no
specifi c IgE was
found against egg
white and yolk,
ovalbumin, or
ovomucoid. Skin
prick tests were
positive with
commercial extracts
of egg white and
lysozyme but
doubtful with yolk,
ovalbumin, and
ovomucoid. Prick-to-prick
tests with raw egg
white and yolk gave
positive results,
but negative results
were obtained with
cooked egg white and
yolk and 5 brands of
cheese (3 of them
containing lysozyme
and the other 2
without lysozyme).
Controlled oral
administration of
papain, bacitracin,
and cheeses without
lysozyme was well
tolerated. We
suggest that the
presence of lysozyme
in a pharmaceutical
preparation, cured
cheese, and raw egg
was responsible for
the symptoms
suffered by our
patient, probably
through an IgE-mediated
mechanism.
Key words:
Additives. Drug
allergy. Food
allergy.
Hypersensitivity.
Lysozyme.
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