Every allergen source is a mixture. A pollen grain, mite body, food, venom, latex preparation, or animal dander extract contains multiple molecules with different abundance, stability, and clinical relevance.

Why extracts can be incomplete

Extracts are practical and clinically useful, but some molecules may be underrepresented, unstable, degraded, or masked. Molecular testing can sometimes detect relevant low-abundance or labile allergens more clearly, while also distinguishing genuine sensitisation markers from cross-reactive molecules.

Examples of source-to-component reasoning

Pollen

Major pollen components may suggest primary sensitisation, while profilins or polcalcins may explain broad pollen positivity.

Foods

Storage proteins, PR-10 proteins, nsLTPs, and profilins can point to different stability and cross-reactivity patterns.

Venom

Marker allergens may help distinguish honey bee and yellow jacket sensitisation when extracts are double-positive.

Latex

Specific latex components and cross-reactive plant food proteins can support interpretation of latex-fruit patterns.

MAA teaching point

Source-level thinking tells us where to look. Component-level thinking helps explain what the immune system may be recognising.