This initial scepticism was compounded by the suspicion that infections might actually provoke allergy. |
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Pregnant women and those with a serious egg allergy should seek further advice. |
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So infecting allergy suffers with parasitic worms could reduce their symptoms. |
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It may also be advisable to carry an emergency card or bracelet to alert others of the allergy. |
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Inflammatory presentations may be the result of allergy, reflux disease or, rarely, neoplasm or Kawasaki disease. |
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A sniff of perfume, aftershave, air freshener or deodorant can trigger a potentially deadly reaction because of a rare allergy she has developed. |
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Try to avoid air travel during a cold, allergy attack or bout of sinusitis. |
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During allergy seasons, the local news broadcasts usually tell you what allergens are in the air. |
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In some cases, allergy skin or blood tests are carried out, to work out what has caused the allergic reaction. |
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If you have severe allergic conjunctivitis you may be referred to a specialist allergy centre. |
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Your body develops an allergy from continued exposure to a specific substance. |
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A common skin symptom of a food allergy is hives, or raised red itchy bumps on the skin. |
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Symptoms of a food allergy usually develop within about an hour after eating the offending food. |
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Our data may shed light on the role of diet in the allergy and asthma epidemic. |
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You may not be able to prevent having a food allergy, but you can avoid having an allergic reaction. |
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The college lecturer had insisted that he had had a genuine cough caused by a combination of hay fever and a dust allergy. |
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A food allergy occurs when the immune system mistakenly believes that a harmless substance is harmful. |
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Reassure patients with a food intolerance that they do not have a food allergy. |
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I still work in feet and inches and have a confirmed allergy to all things computerised. |
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Cayce's literal allergy to logos and brands makes her particularly well-suited to her work. |
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Or they could have a combination of any of these with a severe allergy to math tables. |
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So, tell us Ihar, when did you first notice your allergy to the definite article? |
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How they choose to let this affect their vote is a bit tricky, given the Right's new allergy to popularity. |
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Well, Pete, this is a little tricky, and anyone with even a mild allergy to stats should look away now. |
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It started as a kind of allergy to the ways of their political elders, expressed at first in hard and unsubtle language. |
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What do you make of this allergy to the past that is especially strong in business? |
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I want to return for a moment to your comment earlier about your allergy to literary gangs. |
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Liberals also need to get over their allergy to the cleanest form of energy, nuclear power. |
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Now, he's back with two films, both of which underline his allergy to pigeonholing. |
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If they achieve support because of their allergy to ID cards, then many people must have a lot to hide. |
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If your child's asthma seems to be allergy-related, he or she may also need to see an allergist for medication or allergy shots. |
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The yeast Candida albicans and the beer yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been demonstrated to increase atopic allergy. |
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Concerns about latex protein allergy, however, have caused a number of health care facilities to seek alternatives. |
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Research has shown that cold and allergy medications such as antihistamines and decongestants are not helpful in preventing them. |
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Chronic diseases such as rheumatism, arthritis, allergy and others are well known to be associated with inflammation. |
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All patients underwent rhinological evaluation including symptoms questionnaire, endoscopy, CT scan, allergy tests and nasal cytology. |
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The only person I know who could afford to live in Japan for a stint returned home with an acute allergy and antipathy to fish. |
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The most common sign of food allergy is inflamed, itchy skin, usually around a pet's feet, face, ears, armpits, and groin. |
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Hayfever hits as many as one in ten of us every year, but for some allergy sufferers, the symptoms can last all year long. |
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It is possible to develop an allergy to a product you've been using for years, so don't rule this possibility out. |
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This means they are more likely to develop an allergy because it runs in their family. |
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Children with documented cat allergy or with asthmatic symptoms triggered by a cat should avoid cats. |
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Poorly cleaned heating systems also contribute to asthma and allergy attacks in the fall and winter, say researchers. |
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Any misstep can either lead to a flawed immune defense or to allergy, even autoimmunity. |
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Your latex allergy has brought me untold misery and your aversion to hot wax has cost me hundreds at the laser salon. |
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And had she ordered the salad without tomatoes and avocados due to some serious allergy, I would have felt really bad. |
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There was no seasonal variation to his symptoms, and allergy testing was negative. |
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Andy, who also played the drums and keyboard, had suffered from asthma and a nut allergy since the age of three. |
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To diagnose an allergy to mold or fungi, the doctor will take a complete medical history. |
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I don't want to put her through allergy testing, but how can I safely medicate her with over-the-counter medications? |
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It was the strength of the bond between the two that caused the persistent sensitisation brought on during allergy attacks. |
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People are warned not to use a particular drug as a continued remedy for ill health because a tolerance and allergy can develop. |
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Heather Brown suffers from total allergy syndrome, which leaves her open to attack from common chemicals. |
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There are fewer than 12 breeders in the UK who produce the dogs, which shed no hair and eliminate the problems for allergy sufferers. |
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Ms Hood had a shaky start to her artistic career when she developed an allergy to turps. |
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Vomiting can be caused by an infection, a food allergy, medication, or motion sickness. |
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Why has our understanding of democracy mutated into nothing but an allergy to order and responsibility? |
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A natural doctor can assist with nutritional recommendations and natural allergy treatments. |
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Entire categories such as cardiology, pulmonology, nephrology, gastroenterology and nutrition, and allergy and immunology are omitted. |
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There is still some confusion over the difference between a food intolerance and a food allergy. |
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He saw his family physician as well as respiratory and allergy specialists. |
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The only way to truly distinguish between allergic and nonallergic rhinitis is through allergy testing. |
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I'm using a debit card now to order bulk supplies of allergy medicines through my health insurance company. |
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My advice is to visit an immunologist, who can ask you more questions about how the twins feel, and can look for signs of an allergy. |
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Is there any allergy medicine I can buy over the counter that won't affect my blood pressure or my prostate? |
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All landscape plants for sale in nurseries should be required to have a numerical allergy rating on each container. |
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In all 10 of the cases in which cardiorespiratory reactions to vaccination occurred, the clinical criteria for defining allergy to eggs was weak. |
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Will the change in barometric pressure or the oncoming of precipitation give an allergy sensitive person a headache? |
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For the pulmonary clinician, this heralds the dawn of promising therapies in various domains such as infections, allergy, and cancer. |
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Many over-the-counter cold and allergy medications contain a combination of antihistamines and decongestants. |
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He had been given allergy medications, but only symptomatic relief was obtained. |
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A drug allergy was suspected and eventually traced to analgesic suppositories. |
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If the diagnosis is unclear, an otherwise unexplained elevated immunoglobulin value may be helpful in suggesting allergy or parasitism. |
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She suffers from asthma, has a known allergy to dust, and has had recurrent episodes of parotitis. |
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The classic allergy symptoms such as stuffiness, eczema, wheezing, and itching may be absent, yet cognition and behavior remain affected. |
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This causes the existence of so many kinds of hymenopterous venoms, complicating the problem of hymenopterous venom allergy. |
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Conversely, an allergy is a hyperimmune response to a special antigen called an allergen. |
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This invention relates to inhibiting flea-bite allergy by hyposensitizing the host. |
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This will allow a definite determination of the allergen that needs to be avoided, or potentially hyposensitized with allergy shots. |
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Although hyposensitization is the ideal way to treat inhalant allergy, it does have some drawbacks. |
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These compounds adversely affect the immune system, primarily causing cell-mediated immune deficiency, allergy, and autoimmunity. |
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He did all this while managing patients with primary and secondary immunodeficiencies and allergy. |
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He is board certified in infectious diseases, allergy and immunology, and rheumatology. |
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If your chronic sinusitis is caused by an allergy, nasal sprays can also reduce inflammation. |
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There is no cure for a food allergy and, once your body reacts, the reaction will intensify each time you ingest the nasty substance. |
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Some urban tree species cause an inordinate amount of asthma and allergy problems, while other tree species cause little or no health problems. |
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If you fail all the allergy tests, than a food intolerance is probably to blame. |
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A fasting or elimination test can be performed to determine if diarrhea is caused by a food allergy or intolerance. |
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Worryingly, over half considered severe egg allergy to be an absolute contraindication to MMR vaccination, which it is not. |
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Parents of allergy sufferers said last night they would support clearer labelling of products from the factory to the point of sale. |
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The government has a pathological allergy towards reports in the foreign press, especially ones that focus on Islamist politics. |
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What can the pollen count tell an allergy sufferer, and what do the numbers mean? |
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They called on the Government to make the care of allergy sufferers a full part of the NHS, rather than a postcode lottery. |
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Depending on your allergy, you can automatically cross some restaurants off your list. |
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Jay had been working as a furrier in Glasgow but he contracted an allergy off the pelts. |
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It works best if used preventively, before the nose starts to run and throughout allergy season. |
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I would like to point out a side effect of allergy medications that contain pseudoephedrine for nasal decongestion. |
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Gluten-free breads are offered by numerous companies for people with that allergy. |
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If your symptoms are especially difficult to control, your doctor may recommend allergy shots to desensitize you to dust mites. |
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Clinical history can be unreliable as a diagnostic indicator of latex allergy because of confounding variables. |
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It is said that every fifth person suffers from eczema, psoriasis or some form of allergy and these often run in the family. |
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This is very bad news for the one person in ten who suffers from nickel allergy, or those with eczema or dermatitis. |
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She was later treated with a penicillin-based drug despite her allergy being documented in her case notes. |
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People with an egg allergy react to the proteins in the egg white or the yolk. |
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Zinc will also increase the health of the epithelial tissue lining and sinuses, helping to further resist attack by invading allergy proteins. |
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I recently discovered that I have an allergy to alcohols, including ethanol. |
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Skin tests with pollen and other common causes of allergy help confirm what causes your drippy nose. |
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Today some of the best known of these conditions are total allergy syndrome, chronic fatigue syndrome, and anorexia nervosa and bulimia. |
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A true food allergy is an abnormal response to a food triggered by the immune system. |
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It is wind-born pollen from plants that have inconspicuous flowers like wild grasses or ragweed that are the major causes of respiratory allergy. |
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I recommend ribbon tape, which has a little more adhesive, but may be more likely to cause a tape allergy. |
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The multivariate analyses were adjusted for age, smoking, and family history of allergy. |
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There were also stalls offering beauty treatments and products, allergy testing, information about cosmetic dentistry and advice on how to lose weight and give up smoking. |
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Was it an allergy to opera or was it simply this burning desire to work for the church? |
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No allergy case has been reported, and no other medical situation due to the use of mites has been revealed. |
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He never handed out anything stronger than allergy pills, but it was such a comfort having him close by. |
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The top ten diseases among purebred dogs include several that afflict humans, including cancer, epilepsy, heart disease, allergy, retinal disease and cataracts. |
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You can't build up a tolerance to any asthma or allergy medications. |
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If a wheal or welt appears, it's considered evidence of an allergy. |
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I have never heard of a homoeopath using potentised allergens to treat an allergy, although possibly in some cases this might be an effective treatment. |
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Among them are environmental illness, ecological illness, total allergy syndrome, the 20 th-century disease, and idiopathic environmental intolerances. |
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And he'd get ingrown toenails or an allergy attack while he was fighting. |
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Itchiness caused by a nettle rash, heat rash, allergy rash, or a rash that results from a viral infection may be relieved by a paste of bicarbonate of soda and water. |
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Other recognized factors leading to medication allergy are pre-existing allergies and presence of diseases that interfere with medication biotransformation and excretion. |
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For unexplained reasons, the incidence of peanut allergy has risen over the past few decades in developed countries, paralleling an increase in asthma and atopic disease. |
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Some components of the vegan and fruitarian diets are frequent causes of allergies, but allergy caused by pork or chicken meat is rarely if ever encountered. |
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In fact, from what I understand via this gruff, unamused, and obviously overworked nurse, white Vaseline is used in dermal allergy testing as a base. |
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There is recent evidence that in the UK the high prevalence figures for asthma have plateaued, but this is not true of other allergic conditions like nut and latex allergy. |
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We previously showed that subjects with seasonal allergic rhinitis, out of their allergy season, had a reduced ability to warm and humidify air compared with normal subjects. |
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I have a sneaking feeling that I might have an allergy to beer. |
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Children were also significantly more likely to suffer from these conditions if their father had an inherited susceptibility to allergy or the child was a firstborn. |
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In patients with significantly discomforting or disabling symptoms that are not controlled with standard measures, specific allergy testing may be warranted. |
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I love cats, but have a ferocious allergy to their furriness. |
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When stratified by allergy status, allergic subjects with higher endotoxin exposure were no more likely to have diagnosed asthma or asthma symptoms than nonallergic subjects. |
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Talk to the doctor or an allergist to diagnose your possible allergy. |
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Sometimes, the doctor may refer your child to an allergist to perform allergy testing to find out if the rash is an allergic reaction to a certain substance. |
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For many if not most people with asthma, a major cause of their asthma is an allergy to airborne substances such as pollen, mold, dust mites and animal dander. |
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In some cases, an allergist can prescribe immunotherapy, a series of allergy shots that gradually make the body unresponsive to specific allergens. |
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Most allergists believe that no dog is 100 per cent allergy-free, and often as dogs grow older their coats can change and become more troublesome for allergy sufferers. |
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He grew up a scrawny kid with nagging allergy problems in a suburb of Stockholm. |
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Here, a mother's allergy to snakes deprives the daughter of her favourite screw pine flower, forcing her to adopt dilatory tactics in domestic behaviour. |
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It is also called desensitization, hyposensitization, and allergy shots. |
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We reviewed these evaluations in 60 patients referred after a diagnosis of anaphylaxis in primary care and seen in the allergy clinics at three hospitals in south west London. |
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Cara Duncan, from Aberdeen, has been swathed in bandages since she was three months old to stop her skin erupting in painful blisters from an allergy to everyday items. |
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There are numerous prescription and non-prescription allergy medications available, including antihistamines such as Reactine and inhaled steroids such as Flonase. |
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They suggested that allergy and food idiosyncrasy may coexist. |
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After other possible causes of the child's symptoms are ruled out, the doctor may recommend an elimination diet to help diagnose and identify a food allergy. |
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The researchers say their findings are significant enough to prompt allergy testing for all patients with stenosed stents if a repeat procedure is planned. |
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A pollen count of more than 1,000 signals the Severe Discomfort Zone, when most ragweed allergy sufferers will probably have more severe symptoms. |
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She owns two Persian cats and is anxious that any cat hairs are regularly cleaned up to prevent her 18-month-old son Daniel suffering an allergy attack. |
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They said she had a case of chicken pox and some sort of allergy. |
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The 60-year-old man, who had no history of nut allergy, suffered an anaphylactic reaction to a cashew nut just 25 days after he received the liver transplant. |
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If you have a history of allergy to daisies, ragweed, marigolds, chrysanthemums, or related plants, you may be more at risk of having an allergic reaction to echinacea. |
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To produce a food allergy in mice, lead author Simon Hogan first injected the animals with small amounts of ovalbumin, a harmless protein found in egg whites. |
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Up to 12 percent of these women report allergy to the principal chemoprophylactic agent, penicillin, and are treated with erythromycin or clindamycin. |
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Food allergy can be mixed up with a food intolerance or food poisoning. |
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Milk allergy is an allergy to one or both of the proteins in milk, which are casein and lactalbumin. |
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Individuals with this form of allergy can also develop reactions to other fruits and nuts. |
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Breeding efforts have yet to produce a hypoallergenic fruit suitable for either of the two forms of apple allergy. |
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Widespread and chronic complaints such as heart disease and allergy are not included if they are not thought to be infectious. |
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Balsam of Peru was the main recommended marker for perfume allergy before 1977, which is still advised. |
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This protein has been linked to a rare and understudied allergy to maize in humans. |
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As they are members of the cashew family, they may cause allergic reactions, including anaphylaxis, for persons with a tree nut allergy. |
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These metals have been known to trigger chelitis, an allergy that causes inflammation of the lips. |
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Researchers found that prematurity and low birth weight are not associated with a change in risk for development of food allergy in childhood. |
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Web searches about runny noses and allergy medications can help researchers track changes in pollen count. |
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Cameron Wahid, seven, who had a dairy allergy, went into anaphylactic shock after eating in a restaurant on a family half-term trip to Italy. |
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Exposure to peanuts can cause anaphylactic shock in those who have the allergy, which in severe cases can be fatal. |
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Studies on the mechanism of action of Albizzia lebbeck, an Indian indigenous drug used in the treatment of atopic allergy. |
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Greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet protected against allergic rhinitis and was modestly protective against asthma and skin allergy. |
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Assure that all who will be in contact with camper know of the allergy and can recognize the symptoms of allergic response. |
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The prevalence of late positive reactions and evidence against systemic ampliative allergy. |
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I usually combine this with a product called Quercitin, which helps reduce your body's response to allergy. |
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Ragweed pollen likely will join grass pollen to create a second pollen vortex for allergy sufferers this summer. |
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Patients with an allergy to shellfish are actually allergic to tropomyosin, a protein found in shellfish. |
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Eczema has various explanations, not only allergy, but neurodermatitis and psychological factors. |
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The patient was aggressively treated for laryngopharyngeal reflux and allergy with esomeprazole, nizatidine, montelukast sodium, and fluticasone. |
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Eyedrops and allergy medication will help you cope with different pollens and pollution in the air. |
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It should not be taken during pregnancy or by those with sulfa drug allergy. |
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The pharmacist calls later to report that the pharmacy did not fill the prescription because the patient has a sulfa allergy. |
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Likewise, allergy, food intolerance, cancer, and immunodeficiency cross and share autoimmunity. |
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More pollen and longer pollen seasons will mean many more sniffly and itchy days for allergy sufferers. |
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Efficacy and safety of hydrolysed cow milk and amino acid derived formulas in infants with cow milk allergy. |
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Crans Yoon, a first-year allergy fellow at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center. |
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In the present study, the possible role of allergy in the susceptibility and in the growth of uterine leiomyomas was investigated. |
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Precise assessment of patients with allergy to bee and wasp venoms helps allergists to identify the optimal venom immunotherapy in each case. |
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Containing ketotifen fumarate as a main ingredient, the product helps alleviate nasal allergy symptoms due to pollen and house-dust mites. |
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Rapid oral desensitization in combination with omalizumab therapy in patients with cow's milk allergy. |
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Wheat allergy is an IgE-mediated reaction to one of the proteins in wheat, which are albumin, globulin, gliadin, and glutenin. |
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A form of eczema called cheiropompholyx, possibly due to stress or an allergy to something in rubber gloves you wear at home or at work. |
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The study was based on skin testing of 150 patients, all of whom said they had a penicillin allergy and 137 who tested negative for the allergy. |
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Strange that, as he doesn't seem to have suffered the same on the greenswards of England, so it must be just a Ukrainian grass allergy then. |
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Humphrey, a French Lopeared buck was given away by owner Colin Dunigan, 62, after he developed an allergy to the pet. |
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The purified nRhi o 1 was found to retain IgE reactivity as immunoscreened with mold allergy patient sera. |
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There are heightened nickel allergy concerns over the new coins. |
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Overall, as many as 60 million Americans, or one in every five adults and children, have some form of allergy, which is the sixth leading chronic disease in the country. |
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The high frequency of reactions to octyl gallate is an important finding in patients suspected of cosmetic allergy and who underwent patch testing with cosmetic series. |
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It is unclear how common this allergy is in the general population. |
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The hygiene hypothesis of allergy states that a lack of early childhood exposure to infectious agents like germs and parasites could be causing the increase of food allergies. |
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Peanut allergy has been associated with the use of skin preparations containing peanut oil among children, but the evidence is not regarded as conclusive. |
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They may also cause illness including anemia and flea allergy dermatitis, transmit Murine Typhus and Cat Scratch Disease, and serve as an intermediate host of parasites. |
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The Allergy Dog Central website was started to help dog owners understand and share common dog allergy symptoms, causes and recommended treatments. |
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An allergy causes oversensitivity of the body's immune system. |
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Clinically, lesions are often misdiagnosed as a contact allergy to deodorants, superinfected atopic dermatitis, intertrigo, tinea infections, and hidradenitis suppurativa. |
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Bjorksten and Suoniemi found, for example, that exposure to more intense pollen seasons in early infancy increased the likelihood of later development of allergy. |
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True food allergy is less prevalent than commonly perceived. |
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Hyaluronidase allergy simulating expulsive choroidal hemorrhage. |
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Unknown to the family, Jordan Norrie, who was just two at the time, had developed a peanut allergy which can lead to the potentially fatal anaphylactic shock. |
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Pack a larger-than-normal hypochondria kit that includes sunscreen, plastic bandages and allergy pills. Such things are hard to find or hideously expensive. |
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The subjects were required to be healthy, not to have a record of allergy to pollen or dust, not to be anosmatic, and not to have smoked in the last 5 years. |
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Medications included phenytoin, donepezil haloperidol, benztropine, aspirin, clopidogrel, bisoprolol with hydrochlorothiazide and fexofenadine as needed for allergy symptoms. |
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David Reading of the Anaphylaxis campaign who lost his 17-year-old daughter to peanut allergy in 1993, has advice for anyone worried about the allergy. |
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Among the cells they produced were osteoclasts, large white cells involved in the brittle bone disease osteoporosis, and eosinophils, which play a role in allergy and asthma. |
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It is not a true drug allergy, because allergies are type I hypersensitivity reactions, but repeated exposure to the offending agent can result in an anaphylactic reaction. |
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In this study, 25 men and 25 women with EOE consulted with a dietitian trained in allergy diet restriction, who provided them with sample menus and shopping guides. |
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There are various food allergy tests, radionics testing, and so on. |
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She also saw an allergist, who treated her for dust and mold allergy. |
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Formula milk is based on cows' milk and if your baby is diagnosed with a cows' milk allergy, your GP might prescribe hydrolysed milk formula for her. |
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