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Latex Allergy | Unorthodox Testing and Treatment for Allergic Disorders |
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Last updated July 2007 Keywords: vega testing, advanced allergy elimination, cytotoxic testing, iridology, kinesiology, Alcat test, allergy testing, IgG antibody testing, allergy, allergy elimination technique, VoiceBio ©TM Page Descriptor: Unproven allergy testing provides misleading results, delays correct diagnosis and lead to unnecessarily ineffective treatment. These approaches are not regulated in Australia / New Zealand. Allergy is a science-based specialityModern allergy practice relies on understanding the biological mechanisms underlying allergies such as asthma, hay fever or food and insect sting allergy. Accurate diagnosis requires an examination of the history to determine whether an immune/allergic condition is likely to be the cause of symptoms, combined with reliable allergy testing to confirm the diagnosis. Advice needs to be "evidence based"When considering testing and treatment, advice needs to be "evidence based". In other words, there needs to be evidence that a particular test or treatment is reliable, based on studies of other patients with the same condition. Reliable tests need to be able to distinguish between those with illness and those without. Therapeutic trials are designed to show that any improvement seen is due to the treatment, and not just due to chance or coincidence. Such studies also examine whether a particular treatment may also cause harm as well as benefit. So-called "levels of evidence" have been developed to rate the quality of published evidence, with Level I being the highest quality of evidence, and level IV being of lesser quality. The aim rationale that doctors are able to more readily select a treatment for their patient that is most likely to help. An example of the 2006 Australian NHMRC Levels of Evidence is shown below, and Levels of Evidence for the unorthodox approaches to allergy testing and treatments are also listed in the text.
Use of unproven "allergy tests" is common in AustraliaDespite advances in scientific knowledge about allergic disorders, around half of all people with allergies consult alternative practitioners each year for diagnosis and treatment. Some will undergo unproven diagnostic "allergy testing" or treatments as well. Incorporation of traditional Eastern health care philosophies into Western culture and uncritical media attention to claims of new "cures" for allergy may all contribute to uptake. This topic is reviewed in greater detail at Unorthodox Testing and Treatment for Allergic Disorders (http://www.allergy.org.au/content/view/262/1/) Unproven allergy testing and treatments are not regulatedUnlike claims to "cure" cancer, unsubstantiated claims to be able to detect or "cure" allergic or immune disorders are only stringently regulated by government, medical boards or advertising regulators if the practitioner is a registered medical practitioner. There is also currently no stringent regulation of unproven diagnostic techniques or devices. These devices and tests can be "listed" in Australia without having to prove that they work. Allergy redefined
There are many types of unproven testsA multitude of tests have been proposed to detect "hidden allergies", based on concepts of disease pathogenesis very different to those underlying Western medicine. These have no scientific basis, and have not been shown to be reliable or reproducible when subjected to formal study. Not only are such tests unreliable in diagnosing allergic disease, they are also increasingly being promoted for the diagnosis and management of disorders for which no evidence of immune system involvement exists. ASCIA strongly advises against the use of these tests for diagnosis or to guide medical treatment. No Medicare rebate is available in Australia for these tests, and their use is not supported in New Zealand. Vega (electro-diagnostic) testing (Evidence Level II: inaccurate test)Vega testing claims to detect disease by measuring changes in body electrical currents using a "Vega machine". The patient holds one (negative) electrode in one hand, and the positive electrode is applied to acupuncture points over fingers or toes. An allergen (such as food extract) in a sealed glass container is brought into the electrical circuit. An alteration in current is interpreted as meaning the person is "sensitive" to that substance. Formal examination of this technique shows that practitioners are unable to distinguish between healthy and allergic individuals, and between responses using allergens as well as "dummy" control solutions. Results also don't correlate with those obtained using conventional allergy testing. Cytotoxic testing ("Bryan's test") and the Alcat test (Evidence Level II: inaccurate test)In cytotoxic food testing ("Bryan's test"), the size and shape of white cells is assessed after incubation with food extracts on a microscope slide. These results have been shown to not be reproducible, give different results when duplicate samples of the same blood are analysed repeatedly, and "diagnose" food allergy in people with symptoms that do not actually suggest food allergy. The Alcat test is a variant on a theme; the results are analysed on an expensive laboratory machine instead of under the microscope. Results from these techniques don't correlate with those obtained using conventional allergy testing. Iridology (Evidence Level II: inaccurate test)
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