medicalcondition:allergy

  • Ah ! On le savait bien qu’il y a avait complot vegan !

    A Tick Bite Could Make You Allergic to Meat—and It’s Spreading
    http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2017/06/tick-bite-meat-allergy-spreading-spd

    “You’re walking through the woods, and that tick has had a meal of cow blood or mammal blood,” explained Cosby Stone, an allergy and immunology fellow at Vanderbilt University. “The tick, carrying Alpha-Gal, bites you and activates your allergy immune system.”

    From this, your body creates Alpha-Gal antibodies and, from that point on, the body is wired to fight Alpha-Gal sugar molecules. The majority of people who develop Alpha-Gal allergy syndrome realize their illness after eating meat, which is rife with Alpha-Gal. The sugar is also present in some medications that use gelatins as stabilizers.

    #tique #allergie #viande

  • Thumb-suckers, nail-biters show fewer allergies | Otago Daily Times Online News : Otago, South Island, New Zealand & International News
    http://www.odt.co.nz/campus/university-otago/389963/thumb-suckers-nail-biters-show-fewer-allergies

    Children who suck their thumbs or bite their nails may be less likely to develop allergies, a new University of Otago study suggests.
    The finding emerges from the long-running Dunedin Multidisciplinary Study, which has followed the progress of 1037 participants born in 1972-1973 into adulthood.
    The study, which appears in the August issue of the US journal Pediatrics, suggests that childhood exposure to microbial organisms through thumb-sucking and nail-biting reduces the risk of developing allergies.

    Study lead author Professor Bob Hancox says this exposure may alter immune function so that children with these habits become less prone to developing allergy.

    Parents of Dunedin Study members reported their children’s thumb-sucking and nail-biting habits when their children were 5, 7, 9, and 11 years old.

    The members were checked at ages 13 and 32 years old for atopic sensitisation, defined as a positive skin prick test to at least one common allergen.

    At age 13, the prevalence of sensitisation was lower among children who had sucked their thumbs or bit their nails (38 percent) compared with those who did not (49 percent).

    Children who both bit their nails and sucked their thumbs had an even lower risk of allergy (31 percent), Professor Hancox says.

    The associations were still present at age 32 years and persisted even with adjustments for confounding factors such as sex, parental history of allergies, pet ownership, breast-feeding and parental smoking.

    "The findings support the “hygiene hypothesis”, which suggests that being exposed to microbes as a child reduces your risk of developing allergies," he says.

    Despite these findings, Professor Hancox and his co-authors do not suggest that children should be encouraged to take up these habits, because it is unclear if there is a true health benefit.