June 23, 2013

Grass pollen allergy in children and adolescents-symptoms, health related quality of life and the value of pollen prognosis

Open Access
Research

Grass pollen allergy in children and adolescents-symptoms, health related quality of life and the value of pollen prognosis

Hampus KiotseridisCorrado M CilioLeif BjermerAlf TunsäterHelene Jacobsson and Åslög Dahl
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Clinical and Translational Allergy 2013, 3:19 doi:10.1186/2045-7022-3-19
Published: 22 June 2013

Abstract (provisional)

Introduction

An association between pollen count (Poaceae) and symptoms is well known, but to a lesser degree the importance of priming and lag effects. Also, threshold levels for changes in symptom severity need to be validated. The present study aims to investigate the relationship between pollen counts, symptoms and health related quality of life (HRQL), and to validate thresholds levels, useful in public pollen warnings.

Material and methods

Children aged 7--18 with grass pollen allergy filled out a symptom diary during the pollen season for nose, eyes and lung symptoms, as well as a HRQL questionnaire every week. Pollen counts were monitored using a volumetric spore trap.

Results

89 (91%) of the included 98 children completed the study. There was a clear association between pollen count, symptom severity and HRQL during the whole pollen season, but no difference in this respect between early and late pollen season. There was a lag effect of 1--3 days after pollen exposure except for lung symptoms. We found only two threshold levels, at 30 and 80 pollen grains/m3 for the total symptom score, not three as is used today. The nose and eyes reacted to low doses, but for the lung symptoms, symptom strength did hardly change until 50 pollen grains/m3.

Conclusion

Grass pollen has an effect on symptoms and HRQL, lasting 2--5 days after exposure. Symptoms from the lungs appear to have higher threshold levels than the eyes and the nose. Overall symptom severity does not appear to change during the course of season. Threshold levels need to be revised. We suggest a traffic light model for public pollen warnings directed to children, where green signifies "no problem", yellow signifies "can be problems, especially if you are highly sensitive" and red signifies "alert -- take action".

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.

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