Advertisement
Top 10 winter foods
Use food to your advantage this winter - the right ones can cut your risk for colds and flu.
Users and abusers
Yes, substance abuse can happen to anyone. Read what our forum users have to say.
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND


Allergy
Peanut allergy cure on its way
Last updated: 05 May 2008
A form of immunotherapy that could get rid of a person's allergy to peanuts is likely within five years, even as the condition appears to grow more and more common, a US expert has claimed.

Peanut allergy often appears in the first three years of life, with the allergic reaction to eating peanuts ranging from a minor irritation all the way to a life-threatening, whole-body allergic response called anaphylaxis.

Advertisement
Many children grow out of other food allergies such as milk or eggs, but only about 20 percent lose their peanut allergy.

Dr Wesley Burks, a food allergy expert at Duke University Medical Centre in Durham, North Carolina, wrote in the Lancet medical journal that a solution appears to be on the horizon.

Many current studies could lead to cure
"I think there's some type of immunotherapy that will be available in five years. And the reason I say that is that there are multiple types of studies that are ongoing now," Burks said.

Ideally, such a therapy would change a person's immune response to peanuts from an allergic one to a non-allergic one, Burks said. He added that one possible approach is using engineered peanut proteins as immunotherapy. Other approaches are showing promise, he said, including the use of Chinese herbal medicine in animal research.

Genetic engineering may also produce an allergen-free peanut, Burks said. But he said that because several peanut proteins are involved in the allergic response, the process of altering enough of the peanut allergens to make a modified peanut that is less likely to cause an allergic reaction would probably render the new peanut no longer a peanut.

"You could end up with a soybean," Burks said. He said peanut allergy affects about one percent of children under age of five, and that in the past 15 years more children have been diagnosed with the condition.

Condition becoming more common
He cited research showing the condition becoming more common - doubling among young children from 0.4 percent in 1997 to 0.8 percent in 2002 in one US study.

It is unclear why it is becoming more common, he said. One theory he cited was the 'hygiene hypothesis', which holds that too little exposure to infectious agents in early childhood can raise one's susceptibility to allergic reactions.

Burks said other researchers have suggested that if a pregnant woman eats peanuts, her baby has a higher risk of becoming allergic.

Symptoms of peanut allergy includes skin reactions such as hives, itching around the mouth and throat, diarrhoea, stomach cramps, nausea, vomiting, shortness of breath, wheezing and, in severe cases, anaphylaxis - a medical emergency. – (ReutersHealth)

May 2008

Read more:
Cashews worse than peanuts

 
Print this article on
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent

 JOBS
Operations Manager
R20,000-25,000 Per Month Cost To Company Incl Benefits
Gauteng - East Rand
Financial Accountant: CA(SA)
R400,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Key Account Manager
Gauteng
Java Developer-CT
Western Cape - Cape Town
Java Developer-Jozi
Gauteng
Account Manager
R460,000-540,000 Per Annum Cost To Company Plus Benefits
Gauteng
Account Manager
R460,000-540,000 Per Annum Market Related Plus Benefits
South Africa
Case Manager
R210,000-220,000 Per Annum Negotiable
Gauteng - Pretoria
 Today's top stories
  • REGULAR SEX=BETTER ERECTIONS
  • PREGNANT MAN GIVES BIRTH
  • WOMAN'S ACCENT CHANGES AFTER STROKE
  • LIFES GOOD FOR MICE ON RED WINE
  • ALLEGED FRAUD CASE POSTPONED
  • CANCER CELLS EXTRACTED FROM BLOOD
  • DIABETICS GROGGY AFTER FATTY MEAL
     
    Subscribe to...
    *Daily tip
    *Weekly tip
    Want to subscribe to our newsletters?
    Click here.
    *Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!

     
     
     
     
    Advertisement

     Sponsored links
     Health24 links

    Advertisement

     

    © Health24 2000-2008. All rights reserved
      
    We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
    information.
    Verify here.