Straight talk by an allergist seeking reform in his
profession and a renaissance in the field of allergy...
Advanced Slit Case History 101: Eosinophilic esophagitis, migraines, food sensitivities, asthma
Go ahead. Try it out. Make my day. Try to find case histories on SLIT in medical journals. Sorry, pal, but you won't find any. None at all. Zip. Well, somebody has to start producing case reports on Sublingual Immunotherapy (SLIT) use, right? Alright, it's a dirty job, but somebody has to do it, and so, since I've had 27 years of experience with SLIT, here goes....
You already know where I stand on the importance of case reports; in my prior entry on The Iatrogenic Atrophy of the Case Report, I gave a Case Report on...you guessed it...the Case Report--since The Annals of Allergy Announced they were no longer going to accept unsolicited case reports in their journal. So here's another unsolicited case report, which I'm publishing online, to outline the versatility of SLIT in treating a complex case of allergic disease...
Case Report
Patient X was referred to me by a local allergist on January 4, 2007. This 20-something patient was referred by her allergist to me, principally to help deal with a loss of food tolerance and progressive food sensitivities.
Background history:
Patient X had a history of eczema transiently as a young child, and had a lifelong history of asthma beginning in childhood. Throughout childhood she had recurrent sinusitis. She was treated symptomatically with antihistamines, and steroid inhaler medications, and overall was doing acceptably well in her teenage years. As a college student, she was under much stress, working 15 hours part-time and taking 15-18 hours of college credit per semester. Things were going well until...
The fall of 2005 she suffered from a serious aggravation of upper and lower respiratory tract allergies in Sept & October, followed by bronchitis in October and November. In December 2005 she developed her first migraine headache, and migraines have been bothersome since then. Interestingly, they were helped partially with benadryl useage...
Not only were migraines bothersome, but in the fall of 2005 she began to notice nausea, satiety, and general stomach distress with eating. She reduced her food intake and lost about 40 pounds. Her stomach distress was significant enough to keep her from concentrating on her academic studies. In December of 2006 she had formal gastrointestinal evaluation; esophageal biopsies demonstrated short segment Barrett's, and mid-esophageal biopsies demonstrated 25 eos per HPF, borderline for eosinophilic esophagitis. Her gastric emptying study demonstrated a mild delay to solid phase gastric emptying.
Past medical history: Remarkable for multiple concussions playing basketball, with heavy NSAID use; infection while traveling overseas requiring doxycycline usage for 2 months, June-July 2006.
Prior Allergy Testing & Treatment
Her referring allergist had enclosed records from still ANOTHER allergist (!!), who had previously done prick testing for inhalants, revealing strongly positive ++++ pricks to ash, aspergillus, curvularia, fusarium, pullularia, rhizopus, stemphylium, mucor, and +++ prick tests to dust mite, alternaria, botrytis, ragweed.
Prick testing to foods revealed ++++ pricks to corn, +++ to carrot, soybean.
RAST testing had revealed IgE class I to corn, banana, almond, potato, and soy. Additional RAST testing had revealed IgG class IV to casein, corn, soy, and IgG III to wheat. Gliadin antibody to wheat was negative.
She had peripheral eosinophilia at 8%.
She did not receive immunotherapy. She initially tried to eliminate wheat and corn from her diet, and noted a reduction in migraine headaches for about one month, only to return with a vengance after that.
Status on Presentation
Patient's X's major goal was "to help my health so I can complete college." She had lost 40 pounds, and was afraid to eat. She had dropped out of school because of her multiple illnesses. She had chronic migraine headaches, and continual stomach distress. She was afraid her asthma would again act up in the fall and cause even more problems, but on a day-to-day basis she struggled with frequent migraine headaches and stomach upsets.
Medications on arrival: Allegra 180 mg/d, Topamax 50 mg BID, Prevacid 30 mg/d, Advair 500/50 1-2 x per day, depending on season, albuteral prn, midrin prn, skelaxin 800 prn.
Current diet: avoiding wheat, corn, corn, milk, beef, soy, bananas, carrots, rye, pork, MSG. Craving peanut butter.
Physical Exam: remarkable for nasal turbinate congestion, coated tongue, cold hands with poor capillary filling. Lungs clear at time of presentation. No hepatosplenomegaly or localized abdominal tenderness.
Our Initial Test Results:
IDT Testing: immediate test results
dust: 9mm dil #4
Ragweed: 15 mm dil #5
Grass: 11 mm dil #5
Alternaria: 11 mm dil #5
Fall pollen 10 mm dil #5
Candida 11 mm dil #1
Mold mix 10 mm dil #3
Rast Tests: inhalants
Kentucky/June grasses: IgE Class III
Alternaria mold: IgE Class III
Ragweed: IgE Class III
Rast Tests: selected foods in diet currently eating
Egg: IgE Class II
Pea IgE Negative IgG Class II
Peanut IgE Class I
Almond IgE Class II IgG Class III
Tomato IgE Class II IgG Class III
Potato IgE Class I IgG Class II
Chicken IgE Negative
Candida IgE Negative IgG Class III
Oral Challenge Testing:
Peanut challenge--immediate severe migraine (eating daily)
Egg challenge--immediate exhaustion (eating frequently)
Potato challenge--immediate sinus pain and pressure
Milk challenge--stomach distress
Candida challenge--exhaustion
Assessment & Discussion:
On the "surface", this patient suffers from multiple problems:
- Bronchial Asthma
- Seasonal Allergic Rhinitis
- Recurrent sinusitis & Bronchitis
- Chronic gastrointestinal distress, nausea, anorexia
- Migraine Headaches
- GERD with Barrett's esophagus
- Eosinophilic Esophagitis (borderline)
- Gastrointestinal hypomotility
- Multiple food sensitivities
- Multiple inhalant sensitivities
- Oral allergy syndrome from fresh carrots, bananas
However, it's necessary to use a chronological, "flow-chart" approach to really appreciate what the hell is going on. Believe it or not, getting an "integrated" view of this case isn't really that hard if you go back to some of the principles I outlined in my prior entry Diagnostic Synthesis in Multiple Food Sensitivities. Basically, here's how I saw it on the first day I saw her:
She has had a lifelong history of multiple allergic sensitivities, beginning in childhood with manifestations of eczema and asthma. These were not treated with disease-modifying immunotherapy, but "patched up" with inhalers, antihistamines, etc. Her high-stress college-environment made her susceptible to a flareup in her allergic condition and a further "allergic march to other organ systems. In fact, it turns out she had an allergic march through her life--not just the usual respiratory "allergic march", but a VERTICAL allergic march involving her GI tract and Neurological systems (migraine) when she hit the fall allergy season and had an overload of ragweed and alternaria exposure.
She had enhanced permeability brought about by high NSAID useage and Candida overgrowth. (Prior concusions and high NSAID use followed by 2 months of doxycycline immediately before the onset of her symptoms). Enhanced intestinal permeability subsequently caused aspread of food sensitivities during the fall mold season; Candida growth was further aggravated by the additional antibiotics she took in the later part of the fall for bronchitis. Since enhanced intestinal permeability was her real problem, it didn't surprise me to hear she was only temporarily better on a wheat and corn free diet. It didn't surprise me she had a migraine triggered by peanut on her first visit, since this cross-reacts with soy protein, already a formerly diagnosed food allergen. (The beauty of food challenges is you can actually see what "target organ" is affected by a particular food. For example, peanut triggered a migraine, but milk triggered intense stomach upset.)
Treatment Plan
This involved 3 major areas:
1. Improve intestinal integrity:
---Probiotics, oral cromolyn sodium, and short-course fluconazole
2. Reduce inhalant and food sensitivities with immunotherapy:
---SLIT immunotherapy to inhalants & foods (including all molds), titrated off RAST & IDT tests
3. Offer patient food choices in a structured manner, since she was afraid to eat anything when first seen:
---Rotary Diversified Elimination Diet avoiding initially wheat, peanut, soy, carrot, banana, melon, egg, almond, pork, milk, corn, tomatos, MSG but allowing other foods on rotation
4. Prevent a recurrence of a "crash" in the fall of 2007, like she had in the fall of 2006, by using highpotency preseasonal Ragweed treatment.
Clinical Course:
We had first seen this patient on Jan 4; by Feb 5 (one month later) she her migraines were in complete remission and she was feeling well enough to return to school and complete her course requirements. On her March 5 visit she related she had 1 migraine (stress from midterms). She found improved food tolerance on SLIT, and at that point was able to reintroduce milk and beef back into her diet on rotation. By May 2007 she was able to taper off of gastrocrom, and able to handle most foods, but still had problems with wheat and soy. Her eosinophilia of 8% had improved by July to 2%. She took high-potency preseasonal Ragweed treatment for 6 weeks before the ragweed season. When she was last seen by me in November, she related she had an excellent fall allergy season, especially in light of camping out 3 weekends in August! She was delighted she did not have her bronchitis episodes in the late fall like she had last year. Food tolerance continued to improve, migraines were in remission, she was gaining weight, and only used gastrocrom when eating out at restaurants but still took SLIT for inhalants and foods faithfully. She was off of Advair ("I don't need it") and her FEV1 was 4.546, 116% of predicted.
Important Points:
There are actually several points to be made with this Case Report:
1. Bad things can happen to a patient with multiple allergies who receives no disease-modifying immunotherapy approach, especially if their allergic "load" continues to build in a hidden fashion.
2. The "allergic march" can include not only the classic upper/lower respiratory tracts and skin, but also the development of neurological symptoms, including migraine headaches, and (arguably) eosinophilic esophagitis.
3. The concept of a "critical allergic mass" is important in this case--the patient began to decompensate during the fall ragweed/alternaria mold season, when the additional load of inhalant allergens on previously existing occult food/Candida sensitivities put her in an "overload."
4. Enhanced intestinal permeability needs to be addressed to stop the spreading of food sensitivities.
5. SLIT can be safely used, even in patients who are polysensitized.
6. Eosinophilic esophagitis is one more manifestation of a broadening allergic picture in this patient, rather than a totally distinct issue to be dealt with separately. Interestingly, I have had one more patient (a doctor's son) treated with SLIT for eosinophilic esophagitis, who had a repeat biopsy confirming complete remission (the current patient has not had a repeat biopsy).
7. High-potency preseasonal ragweed SLIT helped the patient enjoy a healthy fall allergy season, with no recurrence of previous chronic bronchitis or other serious respiratory illness.
Her referring allergist was initially skeptical of SLIT useage, indicating in his first letter to me that "I would be somewhat hesitant to use SLIT, taking into account her current gastrointestinal complaints." His most recent letter to me is as follows:
"I am very impressed with your management of patient X. You and your staff have done a very nice job in managing a patient who is difficult to manage with the standard allergy management. Keep up the good work.
It is gratifying to have tools to help complex patients such as this. SLIT is one of them.
Later, Dude
The Allergist ,Immunotherapy, and the future of our speciality--Quo Vadis?
Certain things in life you just can't get seem to get enough of--money, chocolate, a Chicago Bears win, and...nice letters from blog readers. An Italian Allergist recently wrote me in response to my prior blog entries, Why we DON'T need more allergists, and The Allergist: Odd Man Out. Here's what he says:
"I am an Italian allergist and I have read with much interest your reply to the title "we need more allergists" from the ACAAI. I agree with nearly all your points about the shortcomings of today's allergists, but I think that you are wrong in one point: the idea that the answer is SLIT. As you know, SLIT in Europe and particularly in Italy is widely studied, prescribed, and used. But the problem is that some companies producing SLIT are offering this treatment to general practitioners and family paediatricians, hoping to increase in this way the number of prescriptions. In Europe in the next years SLIT will be available in the public pharmacies, just like anti-histamines, etc. In my opinion, and in the opinion of nearly all Italian allergists, we do have to go back to immunological control and immunotherapy, as you correctly state, but in order to differentiate our profession from other specialists the answer is turning to subcutaneous immunotherapy, especially now the new biotechnological products, such as recombinant immunotherapies, are really around the corner. Congratulations for your site and happy new year!"
Awesome letter. On several points. First and foremost, he likes my site, so this means of course he's truly an intelligent and discerning individual. But beyond that he raises an interesting question--is SLIT truly "the answer" for the allergy profession, when it will be available for seemingly everyone to use--patient, family physician, pediatrician, ENT physician?
On one hand, we can treat a larger proportion of our patients safely with SLIT, but is this meaningless if we get no referrals because everyone else is doing it? In a sense, the author poses a large and critical question--The Allergist and immunotherapy: Quo Vadis? The author above apparently feels that injection immunotherapy (SCIT) is "the answer", since he states "in order to differentiate our profession from other specialists the answer is turning to subcutaneous immunotherapy, especially now the new biotechnological products, such as recombinant immunotherapies, are really around the corner." I take exception to this view, for several reasons:
1. On a practical basis, when SLIT is available over-the-counter, many people will logically use this first, before going to an allergist. If they get relief, they'll stop there. If they don't get relief, or have side-effects from SLIT, then they'll see an allergist. Are these "tough cases" the ones we want to put on SCIT, after they've had side-effects from SLIT or not responded? If they had side-effects from SLIT, they will likely have side-effects from SCIT--probably more severe. If they didn't get relief with SLIT for (as an example) grass pollen, then they might be unstable and polysensitized, for example, to grass AND mold--again, not an ideal SCIT population to treat.
2. It's hard to "market" SCIT to a patient population and emphasize they should see an allergist for it, when there is SLIT available over-the-counter, as the author mentions, in the very near future. SLIT is just too damn convenient. I talked about this in an earlier blog entry when I likened SCIT to "painting" and SLIT to "photography". We still use both in our society, but one technique is used alot more--because of its ease, convenience, and cost-effectiveness. (See entry One picture is worth a thousand words: immunotherapy, painting, and the birth of photography)
3. SLIT is more versatile than SCIT. And it's versatility, like Rodney Dangerfield, just "doesn't get respect". SCIT just doesn't work for molds, and SLIT does. SCIT just doesn't work for late-phase reactions, and SLIT does. SCIT hasn't been shown to work for foods, but there's emerging evidence that SLIT works for foods. Multiple protocols should be developed for SLIT--and we use these in our office.
4. Granted, recombinant immunotherapy is attractive and sexy, but it's way farther back than SLIT for approval--at least in our country.
The author is truly correct in that--technically speaking-- "SLIT is not the answer". I'll tell you what is: Doing SLIT better than everyone else. And I mean everyone.
I've used SLIT for 27 years, with multiple protocols--high dose European-style and IDT low dose for late-phase mold allergy. As times change, I have increasingly seen patients on SLIT from other practitioners who have failed treatment--and we have to offer them more than SCIT to help them. The "next-generation" allergist better be ready for these patients! Example 1: A patient on low-dose SLIT from a practitioner treating her for mold allergy, when her real problem was a moldy home and inadequate SLIT dosing. SCIT wouldn't have helped this patient at all. IAQ improvement in her home, and higher dose SLIT for molds did. Example 2: A patient not getting relief on SLIT from another pracitioner because of an undetected food yeast allergy in a patient who was mold sensitive. Again, SCIT wouldn't have helped this patient. And SLIT did.
Finally, It's always risky to differentiate our profession from another by just a technique--and that's all SCIT and SLIT are---techniques. Tools. It's not the hammer and nail that make the carpenter, it's the other way around...We not only need to be the best at delivering immunotherapy, but we need to be the best diagnosticians around--for all allergic diseases, not just asthma. This (I guarantee you) will make patients come knocking at your door. See my entry "How we can fix it" for more.
The Allergist, immunotherapy: Quo Vadis? The answer to this question will determine the direction of our specialty and its survival in the future.
Later, Dude
The Allergist: Odd Man Out?
Ever feel like the Odd Man Out? I have. And it's not a nice feeling. I have a painful memory from grade school--sides were being chosen for baseball teams. There I was, waiting expectantly to be chosen. My hopes gradually diminished as all the other boys were chosen, and finally I was left over, with no one wanting me. I was the odd man out. Not a nice feeling, to say the least.
Well, when we think of baseball, what do we naturally think of? Steroids, of course. And who uses steroids the most? Allergists, of course. We have our patients sniff, inhale, swallow, and lather on more varieties of steroids than Barry Bonds ever tried. But all the steroids in the world won't keep us from being perceived as "the odd man out" by our primary-care medicine colleagues.
You see, many allergists today are "the odd man out" in managing the allergic patient--increasingly, everyone BUT the allergist (i.e., the family physician, pediatrician, ENT physician, internist, dermatologist, chiropracter, etc.) get to "manage" the allergy patient, and the allergist is left with empty hands (and an emptier pocket book). Why is this? Why is the allergist the Odd man out?
Sometimes the truth is ugly. And uglier to face. Getting back to my own childhood experience in being the "odd man out" for baseball teams, I hated the players who were chosen before me, and thought the whole system was unfair. Truth-be-told, I wasn't a good baseball player...in fact, I was a disgrace to the National Pastime. I wasn't chosen because (and get this)--I had nothing to offer either team in the way of talent (or motivation) to make sure our team "won". The Team Captains had nothing personal, mind you, against me--that's just the way they saw it....
Well, how do our colleagues view our specialty? How do they perceive of us?
Easy--just look at the poster picture of 'ol James Mason in the above movie poster. He's a real energetic ball of fire, right? Read the print under the title and picture: "with his back to the wall, in the tense, taut, tormented role of his life". Well, Sydney, that's how most primary care physicians perceive allergists. Don't agree with me? Then you haven't talked to multiple primary care physicians in quite a while. Are you furious with the Angry Allergist? Tough. Get a reality check. Suck it up.
Because it's true.
Here's a thought: maybe the majority of patients don't get an allergy referral from the family physician, pediatrician, or internist because we're perceived of just like I was perceived as a young baseball player--i.e., somebody who doesn't bring a valuable asset or unique talent to bear on the issue at hand.
In order to be a part of the family practice/internist/pediatrician "team" we have to "bring to the table" some tools/techniques/assets to help the patient beyond the usual steroids, antihistamines, etc. that primary care physicians themselves can use. They have to "perceive" of us as offering something more than what they can offer. Then--and only then--we will be "invited to the table" and be part of the team of health care management for our patients. Will an expensive marketing campaign telling patients and doctors that "nobody does it better than the board-certified allergist" work? Of course not. Patients and doctors are too smart for trite platitudes--as one physician assistant told me, he doesn't refer to allergists because he quickly found out that they really didn't offer anything more in the long run than what he himself did medically.
Well, how can we become "a team player" and not "the odd man out?"
For one thing, let's put 5 ideas down and see what shakes out:
1. The Allergist is the odd man out.
2. The internist/pediatrician/family practice community perceive the allergist as not offering anything unique and helpful to the management of their patients.
3. Immunotherapy--something unique that allergists do and is potentially disease modifying--is offered to only a minority of allergy patients by allergists.
4. A safe, effective, painless and convenient form of immunotherapy--if available--could revitalize the allergist's relationship with primary care physicians, and make him a team player.
5. This form of immunotherapy is already available: in SLIT.
I find it incredibly ironic that items #4 & #5 above are being approached by the American allergy community in an unbelievably overcautious, defensive posture. Hey guys--get real--this is the ONLY thing that has a chance to revitalize our sick profession. We'd be able to offer more patients safe effective treatment (Sublingual immunotherapy, i.e., SLIT)--which is something that the average pediatrician, internist, or family physician can't do. Now THAT could engender referrals better than any slick Madison Avenue Campaign. In short, SLIT can in my opinion completely revitalize an allergy field full of tired old symptomatic treatment with inhalers, antihistamines, and creams.
We should be falling all over ourselves doing American-based studies, and promoting SLIT. I mean we should be so manic about this topic we should be SICK of it. After all, can over 100 European studies on SLIT be wrong?
So, we have a choice as allergists: Develop ourselves into a specialty that deserves referrals from primary care physicians. Develop and enhance immunotherapy protocols--specifically SLIT--and do more of what should really define who we are: immunotherapy. Or...continue to push the latest inhaler du jour, the most brightly colored antihistamine, and remain...the Odd Man Out. As for me? I've been Odd Man Out once in my life--and once was enough.
Later, Dude
The Real Crisis in Allergy: Conditional Compassion
Maybe it's just because some of my relatives have recently had "less than optimal" interactions with their health practitioners, or maybe it's because of some recent patients I've seen who have also had "less than optimal" interactions with their former allergists, but I've gotten to thinking...about compassion...Now, I realize that thinking is a very dangerous activity for the Angry Allergist. But what the hey...I live on the edge.
Now, I realize some of you are 5 sentences ahead of me already..."man, now he's accusing allergists of not being compassionate to patients--this time the Shock Jock of Allergy has gone too far." Well, before you degranulate all your mast cells...hear me out...but I warn you, the Shock Jock will nevertheless send a few volts your way...
You see, after 26 years, I've had alot of contact with patients. And also alot of contact with allergists. And in general we are compassionate to our patients...with one teensie eensie caveat--
You see, we allergists are compassionate to patients---on our own terms.
Conditional compassion.
Compassion on our terms. For the diseases we like to treat.
And we've got a bad case. And this, in my opinion is the real crisis in allergy, not the crisis I spoke about in my earlier blog entry "why we don't need more allergists".
What is conditional compassion? It simply means when we see patients who "fit into the box" of our easily treatable diseases--asthma, rhinitis, we like them and have compassion for their plight. We feel comfortable being around them, teaching them inhaler use, monitoring peak flows, etc. And it seems more and more allergists are making little asthma clinics and becoming little "asthma doctors", catering mainly to the asthmatic patient, to the exclusion of other patients. Certainly our major allergy societies are codependents in this regard, with their incessant litany of "asthma-this and asthma-that". So we want asthma patients. Nothing else, if you please. But what about the patient who walks in our office with a question on food intolerance? A history of delayed reactions to skin tests or injection immunotherapy? A history of hyperactivity that seems definitely food related? Chronic fatigue? Headaches from foods? Be honest. How many of us want to really be compassionate and listen to a patient presenting with multiple complex food and chemical sensitivities? How truly compassionate are we? Judging from what I've noticed:
not very.
Point-in-fact: , we can't wait to get this type of patient out of our office. We find these patients distasteful. A few perfunctory skin pricks, a quick pat on the back telling them that they're "not allergic" and whoof!--out the door. We just don't care. Don't believe me? Then you're not living in the real world I live in. I see it all the time as a consulting allergist. Compassion. Conditional compassion.
It wasn't always like this. In the Golden Age of Allergy, allergists were interested in symptoms on all mucosal surfaces and involving multiple body organs--not just the lungs. Allergists really listened to their patients....And when Dr. Francis W. Peabody, on October 25, 1925, ended his lecture to Harvard Medical Students on "The Care of the Patient" he closed with the now classic dictum "the secret of the care of the patient is caring for the patient". I don't recall he said anything about "caring for the patient with asthma exclusively". Don't recall that at all. (But then, again, I wasn't at that lecture in 1925 either...)
But with conditional compassion the real tragedy is ours. Not the patients. Because when we don't care about the patient (except on our terms) , we don't really seek to find out what's really wrong with them if our perfunctory prick tests are negative. But with compassion comes a sense of urgency--curiosity--in finding out what's really wrong with our patient. And to seek--and find--what's really wrong with them--allergy or no allergy--, adds to our knowledge. And with accumulated knowledge and experience comes wisdom.
So the Spiritual Trinity of the Superior Allergist is compassion--knowledge--wisdom. But the greatest of these is compassion...and we need more...unconditionally
Later, Dude
The Second Annual Allergist Poster Contest--Black Box Warning Attached
Hey there all you mouseketeers...it's time for the Second Annual Allergist Poster Contest...even though it's 8 months early. Why, you ask? Easy.
Because I said so.
The First Annual Allergist Poster Contest was such a success we just had to repeat it sooner than 12 months. And besides, there was no clear winner in our first contest. Too many readers thought all 3 posters were equally good. So I've had the CRAP (Committee Regarding Allergy Posters) working hard on another entry. Meanwhile, I've been busy trying to find out where all the American Papers on Sublingual Immunotherapy are...turns out they're harder to find than O.J.'s knife...
True, we've got one nice but lonely American nice study from--you guessed it--our ENT colleagues in Ear Nose & Throat by Saporta & McDaniel , and a host of international studies--but where are our American Studies sponsored and supported by our American allergy academia? I mean, if you look at the literature for 2007 alone, you will find more non-American SLIT studies than you can shake a caduceus at--from Antony, France; Turin,Italy; Melbourne, Australia; Murcia, Spain; Vienna,Austria; Istanbul, Turkey; Turku, Finland; Madrid, Spain; Messina, Italy; Como, Italy; Bari, Italy; Hoersholm, Denmark etc. etc. etc. We American Allergists are so busy demonstrating proper inhaler technique to our asthma patients we forget to study what we do best--immunotherapy. And we ignore a particular form of immunotherapy that just plain rocks: SLIT...
Earth calling all American Allergists--come in, please.
Houston, we have a problem...
So this year, our poster is set to epitomize the American Allergists interest in researching Sublingual Immunotherapy for ourselves...after all, if American Allergists are not just paying "lip service" to our European colleagues when they say they agree they've shown efficacy and safety for SLIT, then there ought to be a TON of research churned out by the Ivory Tower Types on SLIT from American institutions, right? I mean we should see articles every other issue or so in the major allergy journals from American allergists investigating various forms/regimens of SLIT.
Well, Gladstone, they ain't there.
So, here's where I slap on another "Black Box Warning" for you faint-of-hearts, before I formally announce the official finalists in the Second Annual Allergist Poster contest--a contest to epitomize and symbolize the American Allergists interest in SLIT. Here goes:
OK, those of you brave but curious souls who have read and accept the Black Box Warning to the left, you can see the finalists listed below, and I have to tell you in advance they're doozies. The Ultimate "loose cannon" of allergists--the Angry Allergist--chose these finalists himself, after recommendations from our committee. Frankly, even I have trouble choosing between them. But don't worry, you can't go wrong. Any choice seems ok with me. The CRAP will tally votes, and then we'll announce a winner if we have one in an upcoming Blog listing. So drop me an email and vote now! Operators are standing by. Later, Dude.
Finalists in the Second Annual Allergist Poster Contest:
Entry 1: Entry 2: Entry 3:








