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ABO bias in natural immunity
[[Serology]] ====See Also==== * [[Agglutination]] * [[Flocculation]] * [[Isohemagglutinin Titer]] * [[Isohemagglutinins]] . . . It might be expected that since allergy is an immunologic disorder, allergic diseases . . . for blood groups have been rather few and for allergy as a whole rather inconclusive.(4) Although . . .
18K - last updated 2006-05-11 15:54 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Allergens, Dietary
[[Immunology]] ====See Also==== * [[Allergy]] * [[Allergy, ABO Blood Group and Secretor Status]] ====Description==== . . . include the well known anaphylaxis symptoms of allergy; bronchiole congestion and asthma, hives and . . . ulcers. Some of the common physical signs of allergy are dark circles under the eyes; puffiness . . .
4K - last updated 2006-06-02 06:50 UTC by AlanGoldenberg
Allergy
[[Immunology]] ====See Also==== * [[Basophils and Mast Cells]] * [[Immunoglobulin E]] * [[Leukotrienes]] . . . [[Prostaglandins]] ====Description==== The word allergy means 'altered working'. It was coined at the . . . society. According to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), people with . . . than $5 billion annually on doctors' visits, allergy shots and prescription medications. An allergic . . . least 3 genes are believed to be responsible for allergy, but only one has been identified. This [[gene]] . . .
6K - last updated 2006-05-31 07:27 UTC by AlanGoldenberg
Allergy, ABO Blood Group and Secretor Status
[[Pathology]] ====See Also==== * [[Allergens, Dietary]] * [[Allergy]] * [[Atopy]] * [[Basophils and Mast . . . blood types in the response to [[Atopy|atopic]] allergy. Dietary [[Lectin|lectins]] have been shown . . . as fruit class I chitinases. Clin Exp Allergy 1999 May;29(5):673-80}},{{Fahlbusch B, Rudeschko . . . al. Lectins and the radioallergosorbent test. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 1987 Oct;80(4):558-61}},{{Varjonen . . . from adult atopic dermatitis patients. Clin Exp Allergy. 1994 May;24(5):481-9}},{{Zavazal V, Krauz . . .
7K - last updated 2006-06-02 07:22 UTC by AlanGoldenberg
Association analysis of common variants of STAT6, GATA3, and STAT4 to asthma and high serum IgE phenotypes.
[[References]] ====Association analysis of common variants of STAT6, GATA3, and STAT4 to asthma and high . . . serum IgE phenotypes.==== J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2005 Jan;115(1):80-7. Pykalainen . . .
2K - last updated 2006-05-12 09:23 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Associations between atopic diseases and the polymorphic systems ABO, Kidd, Inv and red cell acid phosphatase
[[References]] ====Associations between atopic diseases and the polymorphic systems ABO, Kidd, Inv and . . . free of allergic conditions and without allergy in the family history). The incidence of blood . . .
2K - last updated 2006-05-12 10:16 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Calcium binding atopy related auto-antigen 1 (CBARA1)
[[Nutrigenomics]] ====See Also==== * [[Atopy]] * [[Interleukin-5 (IL-5)]] * [[GATA-binding protein 3 . . . (GATA3)]] ====Description==== Type I allergy is a genetically determined disorder that leads . . .
2K - last updated 2006-05-12 12:36 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Celiac Disease (Sprue), ABO and Secretor Blood Types
[[Pathology]] ====See Also==== * [[The C282Y mutation may have been positively selected as it mitigates . . . ====Description==== The poster child of wheat-allergy gastrointestinal tract disease is celiac. The . . . 8.Freed DJ Dietary Lectins in Food Allergy and Intolerance Brostoff and Callacombe Editors . . .
9K - last updated 2007-01-19 21:51 UTC by DonStJohn
Dietary lectins can induce in vitro release of IL-4 and IL-13 from human basophils
[[Lectinology]] ====Dietary lectins can induce in vitro release of IL-4 and IL-13 from human basophils.==== . . . response towards a Th2 response and type I allergy. ====See Also==== * [[Lectins]] * [[Interleukin-4 . . .
2K - last updated 2006-04-20 12:03 UTC by ool-435621f6.dyn.optonline.net
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
[[Pathology]] ====See Also==== * [[Glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase system (G6PD)]] ====Description==== . . . in response to a number of causes. The classic allergy to consumption of broad beans has led to the . . .
7K - last updated 2006-06-05 15:32 UTC by ool-43560645.dyn.optonline.net
Histamine
[[Immunology]] ====See Also==== * [[Basophil]] ====Description==== http://biology.kenyon.edu/slonc/bio3/amino_acids/Histidine/histamine%20structure.gif . . . protein involved in many allergic reactions. [[Allergy|Allergies]] are caused by an immune response . . .
2K - last updated 2006-06-02 07:08 UTC by AlanGoldenberg
Immunoglobulin E
[[Serology]] ====See also=== * [[Allergy]] * [[Allergy, ABO Blood Group and Secretor Status]] * [[Allergens, . . . from research into the mechanism of a form of allergy known as [[Type 1 hypersensitivity]]. http://www.dadamo.com/wiki/ige.jpg . . . ====Physiology==== IgE's role in allergy is presumably inappropriate — why would a . . . medical community, so the importance of IgE in allergy is often underestimated. IgE, that can specifically . . . cause many of the symptoms we associate with allergy, such as airway constriction in asthma, local . . .
6K - last updated 2006-05-12 09:24 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Interleukin-5 (IL-5)
[[Immunology]] ====See Also==== * [[Atopy]] * [[Cytokines]] * [[GATA-binding protein 3 (GATA3)]] * [[T . . . in haemodialysis patients probably results from allergy to haemodialysis-related materials, including . . . of hemopoietic progenitor cells.===== J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2002 Feb;109(2):307-13. Upham . . .
5K - last updated 2006-05-12 12:27 UTC by PeterDAdamo
Type 1 hypersensitivity
[[Immunology]] ====Definition==== Type I hypersensitivity in which a person's body is hypersensitised . . . substances are known as allergens. The word allergy derives from the Greek words allos meaning . . . ====Links==== * [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allergy Wikipedia Entry on Allergy] . . .
1K - last updated 2006-04-17 14:51 UTC by dhcp64-134-129-168.wbt.phx.wayport.net
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