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fighting allergies

May 22, 2014

Can Vitamin D Prevent Allergies?

Keith Scott-Mumby

Is There A Link Between Vitamin D and Preventing Allergies? Once again, vitamin D has proven to have even more benefits than previously known. We shouldn’t be surprised at the versatility of this essential nutrient! If you want to prevent allergies, boost your immune system, fight infection, and reduce your risk of cancer – consider […]

May 22, 2014

Can Vitamin D Prevent Allergies?

Keith Scott-Mumby

Is There A Link Between Vitamin D and Preventing Allergies? Once again, vitamin D has proven to have even more benefits than previously known. We shouldn’t be surprised at the versatility of this essential nutrient! If you want to prevent allergies, boost your immune system, fight infection, and reduce your risk of cancer – consider […] The post Can Vitamin D Prevent Allergies? appeared first on Dr. Keith Scott-Mumby.

Aug 19, 2013

T-Helpers and Allergy Invaders

Keith Scott-Mumby

When an infective organism invades the tissues, a precise series of events are set up to limit spread of the foreigner and ultimately to destroy it. First a macrophage will encounter the intruder. It engulfs it and then ‘displays’ its characteristic proteins on the surface of the cell as a kind of “flag” or gotcha trophy. We call this chemical flag the antigen, since it generates the rest of the reaction. By means of chemical language (a sort of local hormone called a lymphokine), the macrophage attracts nearby T-helper lymphocytes. They ‘read’ the antigenic matter and go off to program B-cells to produce antibodies to this pattern. The antibody is our own, the good guys’ response, to lock onto antigen carriers and cripple them.

Aug 19, 2013

T-Helpers and Allergy Invaders

Keith Scott-Mumby

When an infective organism invades the tissues, a precise series of events are set up to limit spread of the foreigner and ultimately to destroy it. First a macrophage will encounter the intruder. It engulfs it and then ‘displays’ its characteristic proteins on the surface of the cell as a kind of “flag” or gotcha trophy. We call this chemical flag the antigen, since it generates the rest of the reaction. By means of chemical language (a sort of local hormone called a lymphokine), the macrophage attracts nearby T-helper lymphocytes. They ‘read’ the antigenic matter and go off to program B-cells to produce antibodies to this pattern. The antibody is our own, the good guys’ response, to lock onto antigen carriers and cripple them.
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