|
allergy_season : Allergy Season posted by oikeuruq
|

How to survive allergy season Spring and fall are peak allergy seasons in many areas, with spring trees still pumping out millions of grains of pollen each day and the summer grasses already starting to contribute their share. Sneezing, running nose, and itching – itchy eyes, itchy nose, itchy throat – wouldn't it be great to be able to prevent allergies before they even got started. Preventing asthma and allergies is possible, according to a study in the June 2003 issue of Thorax. Children at high risk for asthma (a medical condition that causes difficulty in breathing) and allergies were recruited in 1990 to be part of this study. Half of them went about life as normal, and the other half had a low-allergy diet as infants – starting with breast milk (with moms on a low-allergy diet) or Nutramigen formula (no milk or soy-based formula). This group of families also undertook significant measures to avoid exposure to house dust during infancy.
|

It makes sense that infants avoiding those foods that commonly trigger allergies would result in fewer allergies. The immature gut allows intact proteins to slip into the body and trigger an immune response. Babies are built to start life with only one food, and then to have only a limited variety for a number of months. It is believed that the hypoallergenic diet helped the children in the study. Avoiding inhaled allergens, though, may be another story. Other studies have shown that babies who are exposed to dogs and cats before the first birthday, for example, are far less likely to develop allergies later. It seems to me that the nose is designed to detect changes (which is why you often no longer notice even very strong odors if you are around them long enough). It seems to me that a baby’s nose learns what is "normal" to have around them in the air during the first year or so, and then begins to consider some later arrivals as dangerous invaders – the body develops an allergic response to them.
|
|

Both groups were followed for years, and those in the normal group were 4 to 5 times more likely to develop asthma which is a difficulty in breathing , allergies, or eczema. Prevention worked! The authors conclude that avoiding allergens during infancy is what made the difference. Allergies happen when the body is tricked into thinking that harmless particles are dangerous invaders. The immune system tries to get rid of these allergens by sneezing them out, flushing them out with tears or mucus, or dislodging them with nose rubbing. It tries to prevent them from getting into the lungs by constricting the airways. These are all normal responses to toxins and viruses. They are allergies if the trigger is not really a problem.
|

Perhaps the allergy prevention would have been even stronger without the mattress covers! Once allergies are present, avoiding the allergens – whether they are pollens, pets, dust, foods, or anything else – is a powerful way to reduce the allergies. Avoiding one item you are allergic to can even reduce your allergies to something else (some people are only allergic to certain foods during the pollen season, for instance). But for babies who have not yet developed allergies, too clean may make matters worse. There may have been other differences between the two groups in the study. One half certainly worked harder and paid more attention to allergy issues. We still have a lot to learn. What’s exciting about this breakthrough study is that it demonstrates that preventing allergies, asthma, and eczema is truly possible. Now we just have to learn how best to do it.
|
|
|
swineflu_vaccine : Swine flu H1N1 vaccine posted by ekpnrof
|

The newest single dose vaccine makes adults immune to swine flu after just one shot of the vaccine. In the past, most experts expected that two shots of a vaccination given three weeks apart would be required. A single vaccine means that stockpiles of the medicine may go twice as far. Note that some high risk children will still be required to get both shots of the H1N1 vaccine.
|

A separate report in the New England Journal suggested that European manufacturers might get away with an even smaller dose. Novartis Vaccines added what's called an "adjuvant", or immune-boosting chemical, to its version of the swine flu shot and found a 7.5-microgram dose was effective. It did, however, have more side effects like injection-site pain. Many countries allow flu vaccines with adjuvants to sell every year, but the US has never approved such an adjuvant-containing flu shot.
|
|

These results came from clinical trials of the "CSL" H1N1 swine flu vaccine from Australia. About 40% of the 195 million doses of swineflu vaccinations being purchased by the US are to be made by CSL. US data appears to confirm those findings and show the protection starts rapidly. Note that these reports swine flu vaccine reports center on adults only, studies on children aren't finished at this time.
|

US Federal officials do not want to discourage healthy adults from getting the shot. But the CDC is only specifically recommending swineflu vaccinations for people at high risk for complications such as medical workers, pregnant women, children under 2 years old, parents of babies, or anyone with existing conditions that could make an influenza infection fatal.
|
|
.
|
|