Testing options
Family background, personal history and a
physical examination will help your physician determine if an allergy
is likely. If your doctor suspects allergy, only an allergy test
can tell for sure. Steps can then be taken to identify the specific
allergens triggering your symptoms. Four types of tests can be used
to confirm an initial allergy diagnosis. While any of these tests
can give you answers, they do differ in regard to comfort and convenience.
Blood testing is done in a laboratory and is referred
to as in
vitro (in glass) testing or IgE blood testing. Measuring
the amount of IgE in one blood sample can determine if you
are allergic, and exactly what you are allergic to. You can
be tested for dozens of different allergens at the same time
and from just one blood sample. The simple blood draw can be
done at your family doctor’s
office.
The ImmunoCAP® Allergy blood test is
the latest technology in allergy testing. ImmunoCAP is cleared
by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and is endorsed
by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other health organizations.
Leading institutions such as Johns Hopkins, the Mayo Clinic
and the Cleveland Clinic use ImmunoCAP for their patients.
To find a testing location near you, use the pull-down menu
on the left.
Skin testing is done by applying
suspected allergens directly to the skin (usually on the forearm
or back) with a skin-prick device or needle. That means one prick
or poke for each and every allergen for which you're being tested.
The appearance of a raised welt or other irritation means you're
sensitive to the test, but it doesn't always mean you're allergic.
Skin testing carries a risk of reaction, because the process requires
that allergy triggers be injected directly under the skin. Skin testing
is performed routinely by allergists.
Food challenge is a double-blind test used to diagnose
food allergy. Various foods, some of which are suspected of inducing
an allergic reaction, are placed in individual capsules. The patient
is asked to swallow a capsule and is then observed to see if there
is a reaction. This process is repeated until all the capsules
have been swallowed. In a true double-blind test, the doctor is
also "blinded" (the
capsules are prepared by another medical professional) so that neither
the patient nor the doctor knows which capsule contains the allergen.(1)
The advantage of a food challenge is that
if the patient has a reaction only to suspected foods and not
to others, it confirms the diagnosis. Someone with a history
of severe reactions, however, cannot be tested this way. This
type of testing is most commonly used when the doctor believes
the reaction a person is describing is not due to a specific
food, and the doctor wishes to obtain evidence to support this
judgment so that additional efforts may be directed at finding
the real cause of the reaction.(1)
Patch or epicutaneous testing is used to determine what’s
causing contact eczematous dermatitis. Before administering this
test, the patient’s hobbies, habits, occupation and use of cosmetics,
lotions, cleansers and ointments are considered. Consultation with
an allergist and/or dermatologist is also recommended. A patch containing
the suspected allergens is applied to the upper back or arm, depending
on the number of possible allergens, and remains on for 48 hours.
The skin is then examined for allergic reactions.
1) Fact Sheet: Food Allergy and Intolerances. Bethesda,
MD: Office of Communications and Public Liaison. National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. National Institutes
of Health. Public Health Service. U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services. June 2001. |