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For some people, a simple peanut or a bite of a shrimp can cause the body's immune system to wildly overreact.
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In some cases, the results can be deadly.
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But what exactly is happening in the body for it to confuse nuts or shellfish with a true threat?
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By definition, a reaction to a food is only considered an actual allergy if the immune system is involved.
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And if the response is caused by immune cells called IgE antibodies, which we'll get more into later.
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But it's important to distinguish an allergy from a sensitivity or an intolerance, which
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involve uncomfortable symptoms as a reaction to food, but don't cause an immune response.
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So if you're lactose intolerant,
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you're not allergic to milk.
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Hi. My name is Tina Sindher.
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I'm a Clinical Assistant Professor in allergy and immunology at Stanford University.
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And I see patients in my clinic with, eczema, with asthma, food allergies, with environmental allergies.
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And my main focus lies in food allergy research.
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In order to understand food allergies, we need to know how the body evaluates food in the first place.
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In a typical immune system, your body is constantly evaluating different antigens to deem them
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either benign or dangerous, in this case, the proteins on the food particles.
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When they eat a peanut for the first time, their body kind of tells your immune system,
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like, look at this, this is a peanut, do not fight this in the future.
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So that every time they eat a peanut, their immune system does not react to it at all.
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The immune system is basically building up a tolerance for the next time peanuts are around.
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But in the allergy afflicted, by the time they eat something like a peanut, their body
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is already primed for an immune response.
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Our immune system is kind of like a seesaw, it needs balance.
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So, on one side of the seesaw is your T regulatory cells.
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And they are kind of your brakes.
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They're the cells that tell your immune system, calm down, slow down, do not fight this.
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And then the Th2 is your allergic cells.
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And they are ready to go, and revved up.
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And they will bring in all other inflammatory cells to fight what they perceive as danger.
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In most people, the T regulatory cells hold more weight in determining what's problematic and what's harmless.
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But in people with a more Th2-skewed system, their cells sound the alarm much more easily
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and have a high sensitivity to the harmless proteins on foods, most commonly milk, eggs,
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wheat, soy, peanuts, tree nuts, fish, or shellfish.
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But having a skewed immune system isn't enough, there has to be a trigger point to
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developing a specific allergy, and that's still not completely known.
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One of the proposed thoughts on how allergy begins has to do with the allergen entering the body the wrong way, through the skin.
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Minuscule food particles floating in the air can enter the body through the skin if there
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is dysfunction in the skin barrier due to something like eczema.
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We're talking about nanoparticles of peanuts.
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So it can be in your bedding, it can be in the air.
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You might be getting exposed to it without any knowledge of it.
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It's that it's entering our, it's interacting with our immune system in a way that it's not meant to.
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We're not supposed to get food allergens to come in through our skin. Or environmental.
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So really the initial process is the barrier breakdown that we're seeing.
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So, in some people, when immune cells in the skin encounter these antigens, they recognize
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that they are foreign and in the wrong place.
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This ultimately signals the immune system to produce antibodies called immunoglobin
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E or IgEs to fight against the food proteins.
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Now, when this same food is finally ingested the right way through the mouth, the body's
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IgE's will recognize it as a threat and respond in full force, leading to an allergic reaction.
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And the way this looks is basically, when your mast cells and basophils open up, they
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contain histamine and tryptase, and a bunch of other inflammatory mediators.
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And those are what drives the reaction.
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This inflammatory response mirrors the body's reaction to a parasitic infection.
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But, skin exposure is not dangerous for those with food allergy already.
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Our body shouldn't be responding like that, right, to food, and that's what we're hoping
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to figure out, and that's what we're hoping to prevent.
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We know that our immune system has developed this kind of response, but we don't know the why.
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There is a genetic component to who has allergies and who doesn't.
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Children whose parents have allergies are more likely to have allergies themselves.
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But there are other environmental factors at play that mess with the balance of the
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seesaw of an individual's immune system.
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So it's not one thing, it's multifactorial.
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And it's our diet, it's our lifestyle, it's modern conveniences that may push us kind
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of over the edge for some, not all, but some.
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The thing is, we might just be too clean.
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This is what's known as the hygiene hypothesis which says that a lack of exposure to germs
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early in life can trigger the immune system to mistake a food protein as an invading germ.
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So for fewer allergies, maybe...
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Get a dog, roll around in dirt, don't wash your clothes, and play in the sun.