Allergy to pork linked with cat allergy
Medical condition
Pork–cat syndrome is an allergy to pork , usually after adolescence , that is related to cat allergy. Although first described in 1994,[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] it was first documented in the U.S. by Scott Commins and Thomas Platts-Mills during their research on alpha-gal allergy .[ 4]
It is called "pork–cat syndrome" because it is a cross-reactivity where an allergy to cat serum albumin (protein made by a cat's liver )[ 4] cross-reacts with pork albumin and "can lead to severe or even fatal allergic reactions on occasions when pork is consumed."[ 3]
See also
References
^ Abreu, Carmo; Gomes, Raquel; Bartolome Borja, Bial-Arístegui; Falcão, Helena; Cunha, Leonor (30 March 2015). "Pork-cat syndrome?" . Clin Transl Allergy . 5 (Suppl 3): P164. doi :10.1186/2045-7022-5-S3-P164 . PMC 4412402 .
^ Warner, Jennifer (6 November 2011). "Pork-Cat Syndrome an Under-Recognized Allergy" . WebMD.
^ a b Posthumus, Jonathon; James, Hayley R; Lane, Charles J; Matos, Luis A; Platts-Mills, Thomas A E; Commins, Scott P (24 March 2017). "Initial Description of Pork-Cat Syndrome in the United States" . J Allergy Clin Immunol . 131 (3): 923–5. doi :10.1016/j.jaci.2012.12.665 . PMC 3594363 . PMID 23352634 .
^ a b Zaraska, Marta (2 December 2013). "Allergic reactions to pork may be prompted by a protein made in the liver of cats" . Washington Post . Archived from the original on 25 March 2017. Retrieved 24 March 2017 .