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Study discovers new genetic risk loci linked to children’s food allergies

What role do genes play in egg, milk, and nut allergies? A study published in Nature Communications, led by the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) and Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, has found five genetic risk loci that point to the importance of skin and mucous membrane barriers and the immune system in the development of food allergies.

An estimated five to eight percent of all children suffer from food allergies. They usually appear in the first years of life and manifest themselves in the form of itchy rashes and facial swellings, which occur shortly after food ingestion. Food allergies can, however, also cause severe allergic reactions involving breathing difficulties, vomiting, or diarrhea, and are the most frequent triggers of anaphylaxis in children. Anaphylaxis is the most extreme form of an immediate allergic reaction and can be life-threatening.

Breakthrough in Search for Peanut Allergy Cure

Breakthrough in Search for Peanut Allergy Cure New study found 80% of subjects could still tolerate peanuts 4 years later By Evann Gastaldo This Feb. 20, 2015, file photo shows an arrangement of peanuts in New York.   (AP Photo/Patrick Sison, File) (NEWSER) – Could a cure for peanut allergies be close? Australia’s ABC reports that in a new study, 82%Continue reading “Breakthrough in Search for Peanut Allergy Cure”

Bathing Binky in Spit May Curb Baby’s Allergy Risk

> Parents who suck on their child’s pacifier to clean it may be inadvertently reducing that child’s risk of developing allergies. Note that the findings suggest that the transfer of oral microbes from the parent to the infant could be responsible for modifying the allergy risk, and the make-up of the bacteria in the infants’Continue reading “Bathing Binky in Spit May Curb Baby’s Allergy Risk”

Effect of egg white fermentation with lactobacilli on IgE binding ability of egg white proteins; reducing egg allergy by fermentation

The study demonstrated the potential of reducing egg allergy by fermentation of egg white with L. delbrueckii subsp. delbrueckii. Egg allergy, afflicting around 1.6% to 3.2% of the total children population, is the second most common food allergy among infants and young children. The objective of the study was to determine if lactobacilli fermentation couldContinue reading “Effect of egg white fermentation with lactobacilli on IgE binding ability of egg white proteins; reducing egg allergy by fermentation”