Rice

Rice Scientific Information
Type: Whole Allergen
Display Name: Rice
Allergen code: f9
Family: Graminae (Poaceae)
Species: Oryza sativa
Route of Exposure: Ingestion
Latin Name: Oryza sativa
Other Names: Popped rice, Jasmine rice, Wild rice, Basmati rice, rice semolina
WHO/ICD-11 code: XM3XQ1

Summary

Rice (Oryza sativa) is an essential food crop cultivated and routinely consumed globally and is regarded as a staple food for ~50% of the total world’s population. It is extensively cultivated in Asian countries, such as India, China, Japan, Indonesia, Myanmar, Cambodia, Nepal, the Philippines, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Thailand, the Republic of Korea, Srilanka, and Vietnam. Hence allergy to rice is predominantly reported from these countries. Oral ingestion of cooked/boiled rice, inhalation of uncooked, steamed rice, raw rice husk/dust, or direct skin contact with rice (sorting/handling rice or washing rice before cooking) have been considered as important routes of exposure causing rice allergy in individuals. Ingestion of rice may induce IgE-mediated food allergy symptoms, such as oral allergy syndrome or even anaphylaxis. Inhalation of rice husk/ raw rice powder could lead to respiratory symptoms (such as asthma, allergic rhinitis, and rhino-conjunctivitis), while direct contact with rice may cause skin symptoms (such as generalized urticaria/angioedema, and atopic dermatitis). Ory s 14 (a 14-kDa lipid transfer protein) is an important food allergen present in rice seed, that is found to be heat stable and resistant to pepsin digestion. Besides, Ory s 1 and Ory s 12 are rice pollen allergens responsible for causing respiratory allergic symptoms. Rice has been found to cross react with other cereals, such as barley, oats, wheat, rye, soybean, and corn, with fruit such as peach, and also with grass pollens.

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