Quote from: CMdeux on January 22, 2014, 10:06:05 AM
Right-- your reactions are occurring within the right time-frame to be plausibly IgE-mediated.
Your symptoms are also quite plausibly IgE-mediated.
QuoteI'm talking about desensitization for delayed food allergies. That's in the title. I'm not talking about desensitization for systemic food allergies, or proposing that anyone try it at home.
Quote from: CMdeux on January 21, 2014, 12:54:10 PMNot necessarily true. IgE antibodies get generated locally, and Xolair doesn't necessarily get into the tissues in sufficient concentrations to affect the allergic reaction.
If your allergies are IgE-mediated, Xolair would improve them.
QuoteNot the reputable sort, they don't. OY.I don't know anything personally about "cyclic food allergies", so I can't comment. But, simply saying "it's not reputable" doesn't work as an argument. They were board-certified allergists and allergist/ENTs. Not naturopaths.
Quotethis is an area where the science gets very very fuzzy in a hurry because (bluntly) there are SO many quacks operating that it all turns into hashI agree. BUT this does not mean I was citing pseudoscience. I went out to look at what the scientific evidence says about this kind of food allergy. There's much more that I didn't mention.
QuoteNot ONE reputable American allergist would attempt desensitization for foods otherwise. It's dangerous.I'm talking about desensitization for delayed food allergies. That's in the title. I'm not talking about desensitization for systemic food allergies, or proposing that anyone try it at home.
Quoteyour strategy might be fine for someone who does not have IgE-mediated food allergy, an eosinophilic disorder, or some combination of the two... for anyone who does, avoidance is avoidance. Lives are on the line, and anyone that ignores that imperative does take their life into their own hands.OK, warning well taken.