Quote from: booandbrimom on March 08, 2013, 07:23:39 AMQuote from: CMdeux on March 07, 2013, 03:04:43 PM
Yeah, I find the smoking thing interesting because it is something that has a mechanistic explanation as a possible modulator of genetic expression. That's what the term "epigenetic" means, and this is where you can find shifts that seem to occur over 1-3 generations.
So this is from SIX YEARS ago:
http://www.peanutallergy.com/boards/did-the-grandparents-of-your-pa-child-smoke
Just saying.
Quote from: CMdeux on March 07, 2013, 03:04:43 PM
Yeah, I find the smoking thing interesting because it is something that has a mechanistic explanation as a possible modulator of genetic expression. That's what the term "epigenetic" means, and this is where you can find shifts that seem to occur over 1-3 generations.
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An EpiPen will prevent death if it's used within 20 minutes of exposure,
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There is evidence that having a parent or a grandparent who smoked — even if the child was never exposed to smoke — is a risk factor for food allergies, as is living in an urban area with elevated pollution.
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Nadeau stresses that oral immunotherapy is still experimental. Her patients are not cured; they are desensitized enough that they can tolerate their former allergens. The reason that she doesn't call it a cure is that the child must continue to eat a maintenance dose of the food every day to avoid regaining the allergy. She often explains to her patients, "If you get off it for three days, you may become sensitive again." An egg-allergy trial found that when patients were taken off the maintenance dose for a month, roughly 60 percent regained the allergy (and there was no way to predict who those patients would be).