Novel blood testing for autoimmune chronic urticaria
Offer your chronic urticaria patients a more reliable assessment with Labcorp’s pooled donor basophil activation test (PD-BAT).
Offer your chronic urticaria patients a more reliable assessment with Labcorp’s pooled donor basophil activation test (PD-BAT).
Understand the underlying triggers of your patients’ symptoms and rule in—or rule out—an allergy as the cause. Allergic responses can develop to previously tolerated substances, and sensitization to seasonal and/or perennial allergens can often accumulate to trigger allergic symptoms.
Any patient presenting with eczema, contact dermatitis, or urticaria or other suspected skin allergy symptoms could be a candidate for specific IgE blood testing.
Along with a physical exam and patient history, specific IgE blood testing can help evaluate allergen sensitization, which may aid in the diagnosis of allergic disease and help you develop a comprehensive management plan for a skin allergy.1,2
Allergies can change over time. Some people will outgrow their allergies while other people can develop new allergies as they get older in a progression that is often called the “allergy march.”
Young children that have eczema (atopic dermatitis) are at a higher risk for progressing in the “allergy march.” Compared to children with non-atopic dermatitis (eczema that isn’t related to an allergy), they are more likely to develop allergic rhinitis and asthma.3,4
If eczema is diagnosed early enough in childhood—and treatment helps repair the affected skin—some research suggests that the “allergy march” for developing allergic rhinitis and asthma may be prevented.4
Contact a Labcorp representative to learn more about how we can help meet your allergy testing needs
If you’ve noticed one or more of the following symptoms—rash, itching, redness, swelling, raised bumps (hives), or scaling, flaking or cracked skin—you may have an allergic skin condition such as:
Eczema (atopic dermatitis)
Contact dermatitis
Hives (urticaria)
An allergic skin condition can be caused by exposure to one or more of many different allergens—substances that cause an allergic reaction—such as pollen, food, certain metals, latex, pet dander, medications, plants and household products, among several others.
Your primary care provider can help identify your condition and create a personalized allergy action plan that improves your quality of life.
Available at your primary care provider’s office, a specialist’s office or at a Labcorp patient service center, you can get a blood-based specific IgE allergy test that is:
A convenient blood test
Appropriate for anyone (age 3 months and older)
Not affected by prescription or over-the-counter medications
Can be performed regardless of your skin condition
Along with a medical exam and your healthcare history, your primary care provider or specialist can use the results of a skin allergy blood test to:
Determine which allergens may trigger your skin condition
Control your allergy symptoms
Determine how to best manage allergy triggers
Prescribe medication