Word: peanuts
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Every medical advance comes with at least some caveats, but last week's news about an experimental treatment for people who are allergic to peanuts includes more than the usual paragraph of fine print. For starters, it's clear that the treatment is not a cure for peanut allergy. Not only might you have to take it for the rest of your life, but you would still have to avoid peanuts. And if it ever becomes available (a big "if," given the frosty relations among the companies involved in its development) the treatment is likely to be quite expensive...
...since about 1.5 million Americans suffer from peanut allergy and more than 150 of them die each year, usually from accidental exposure to peanuts or peanut products, any advance in the field is worth exploring...
...news last week was that a compound called TNX-901, given to patients with peanut allergy, has proved effective in ratcheting down the body's allergic responses to the legume. Patients with severe peanut allergy who were injected with the highest doses of TNX-901 could be exposed to the equivalent of nine peanuts without developing a severe reaction according to a study reported in the New England Journal of Medicine. It was conducted by a team of doctors led by researchers from the National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver, Colo., and the Mount Sinai School of Medicine...
...anyone who has lived with a peanut allergy knows, it can be very dangerous. Unlike hay fever, an even more common allergy, an allergic reaction to peanuts can quickly kill you. In a process called anaphylaxis, the body overreacts to the point that its airways clamp down, which can lead in some cases to suffocation. Fortunately, anaphylaxis can be reversed--if it is recognized in time. (The EpiPen, a portable adrenaline shot that patients suffering an attack can give themselves before they get to the emergency room, has proved to be a lifesaver...
...University have found a clue as to what is going on. Using information from a 14-year study that followed 14,000 children in southwest England from before birth, the team discovered that 84% of those who developed the allergy had been treated with creams containing peanut oil. They also found that children who had been fed milk from soybeans, which contain similar proteins, had a 2.6 times greater chance of becoming allergic. The Bristol group believes the reaction develops primarily in children with rashes or eczema, where the skin creams containing peanut oil enter the body through damaged skin...