| Your body is a weapon. The immune system is a machine of war, ready to take on invaders. The immune system has its own internal affairs department: it can identify cells which are infected with viruses and which are in the process of becoming tumours.
But like all armed forces, your immune system makes mistakes. In real life they call it friendly fire, an oxymoron like negative growth or military intelligence. In your body it’s called an allergic reaction.
In its allergic mode, your immune system misidentifies an otherwise benign substance as harmful, and then attacks the substance with a vigour and ferocity that’s far greater than required.
This can cause you to feel either mildly inconvenienced, or it can lead to the complete failure of the organism the immune system is supposed to protect.
Mast cells play a vital role in allergies because they produce histamine, a key weapon in the body’s flight against infection.
The problem is that when histamine is released in too great a quantity or at the wrong time it creates trouble.
It takes around eight days for the mast cells to become primed with IgE antibodies, the antibodies that react to intrusion.
After that, if the allergen is encountered, it triggers a destructive domino effect within the immune system known as an allergic cascade. So whether it’s a pollen particle that’s been inhaled or venom of a honeybee that’s been injected into your bloodstream, it results in the same sequence of events.
Here’s what happens next: |
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