An Allergy is an abnormal reaction of a person's immunesystem against a normally harmless substance. When a person who is allergicencounters the trigger, the body reacts by releasing chemicals which causeallergy symptoms.
It’s caused by the exposure to certain things availabledirectly or accessible to an individual with the development of varioussubstances and their symptoms which means that a person is susceptible toAllergy of some nature! For example, medications have known and expected sideeffects; a person experiencing one of these side effects is allergenic towardsthe consumption of medicinal intake in his/her diet chart/plan. The hormonescould be as strong as to fight the disease automatically without the presenceof any external antibiotics substances to be mixed into the blood. During the`Allergic` process inside an individual’s body the cells responsible forcreating a presence of allergy into different organs of the body captures thefighting cells present in the hormones and kill them to make the human bodyvulnerable towards the inner strength to fight the allergenic cells. Someallergens could be easily cope up with while others are extremely acute thatdemands appropriate diagnosis and treatment processes through a re-known doctoror a reputed hospital/clinic where further instructions could be made availableto the patient with enormous patience and ease to overcome the stumbling block.A slightest mistake to achieve success immediately overnight might createcatastrophic outcomes towards the patient as allergens do not requiresspontaneous(Quick) results but could hardly take time to repair or healthemselves. Different `Allergies` requires different nature of expertise andthere treatments processes as one part of it couldn’t be related to any otherform of acute allergies of the environment. The allergies can be contractedthrough hosts of reasons and could affect the human’s immune system for ex:Dirt Allergy, Medicinal Allergy, cold and flu, Viral Infections, animal dander’s,dust mites, foods, venoms and medications, Hay fever, asthma, Skin allergies,Insect allergies, Infant allergy, etc. This occurs through a process called`Sensitization`. It appears that the allergic response was once meant toprotect the body against parasitic infections, although now seems to be anabnormal response to non-infectious triggers. Allergies can occur at any timeduring our lives, but are more common to occur during childhood or youngadulthood.
The allergic person can make allergic antibodies, or IgE,against a variety of allergens, including pollens, molds, animal danders, dustmites, foods, venoms and medications. This occurs through a process calledsensitization, where a person’s immune system is exposed to enough of theallergen to make the body produce allergic antibodies to that substance.
With later exposures, that same allergen binds to itscorresponding IgE on allergic cells, and the body reacts with symptoms ofallergies. Allergic symptoms can vary somewhat with the type of allergen androute of exposure (airborne pollen exposure may cause different symptoms thaneating a food to which you are allergic).
During an allergic process, the substance responsible forcausing the allergy, or allergen, binds to allergic antibodies present onallergic cells in a person's body, including mast cells and basophils. Thesecells then release chemicals such as histamine and leukotrines, resulting inallergic symptoms.
It is unknown why some people develop allergies and somedon’t. Allergies seem to run in families, and in some cases family members canshare allergies to specific foods or medications. It appears that the allergicresponse was once meant to protect the body against parasitic infections,although now seems to be an abnormal response to non-infectious triggers.Allergies can occur at any time during our lives, but are more common to occurduring childhood or young adulthood.
Most everyone has an idea of what an allergy is.Allergies are so common, in fact, that it seems acceptable to discuss allergysymptoms at a cocktail party with perfect strangers.
In children, allergic disease first occurs as atopicdermatitis (eczema) or food allergies. Children with atopic dermatitis are thenat an increased risk of developing allergic rhinitis and asthma; both are morelikely to occur in school-age children.
Typically, atopic dermatitis goes away by adulthood, asdo many types of food allergies. Allergic rhinitis and asthma, however, mostoften start during the adolescent, teenage and young adult years, and arelikely to persist throughout a person’s life. The severity of allergicsymptoms, however, may wax and wane, and even temporarily disappear during aperson’s life.