What Are Allergies And Who Is At Risk?
| The Cast Of Characters In An Allergic Reaction | Page Topics | |||||
| Basophils Eosinophils Immunoglobulins | | Mast cells Mediators Sensitization | | | The Action Of A Reaction Who's At Risk? Costs | | How Allergies Develop Risk Factors |
Rarely is a medical term used as frequently and casually as "allergy." It pops up in everyday conversation to describe what we don't like school, work or just about anything else. But medically speaking, allergy has a very specific meaning: it is a biologic reaction to something your body doesn't like.
Allergies are an abnormal sensitivity to allergens, which can be ingested, inhaled or touched, and which most other people can tolerate without trouble. Usually, the immune system does not waste its time by reacting against nontoxic substances in our environment, using its various weapons to instead fight the viruses, bacteria, fungi and other parasites that threaten health.
One set of weapons in your immune system (including IgE antibodies, mast cells, eosinophils, and type 2 helper T cells) is your body's branch of defense against worms, parasite larvae, and certain fungi. In some areas of the world, we couldnt live in full health without this function of our immune system. But in people with allergies, this set of weapons launches attacks against a perfectly harmless substance, such as ragweed pollen, animal dander or certain foods or drugs. The word allergy comes from the Greek allos, meaning other. It was first used in 1906 to refer to an altered reaction in the body's immune system.
Mild allergies are more of a nuisance than a threat. They can requiring your vigilance so that you avoid exposure, or they may require medical treatment. Occasionally, allergies can be life threatening.
The Action Of A Reaction
Most people know their allergies by the reaction they cause the sneezing, wheezing and other effects that are none too pleasing. What they may not know is that what happens to their body is a result of what's happening inside it.
An allergic reaction is what happens when your immune system tries to mount a defense against what it believes is a hostile invader. During a period of sensitization, the time when you are exposed to a specific allergen, white blood cells that come in contact with particles of allergen produce proteins called IgE antibodies. If you were fighting an invasion by a parasite, this would be the first step in a cascade of events that could lead to the parasite's death. In the case of a brief exposure to an allergen, your IgE antibodies may not trigger a full reaction when they are first formed. In either case, your immune system will be "practiced" at forming these IgE proteins the next time that the same allergy trigger comes along, so a large number of antibodies will be formed quickly.
The body produces five different classes of antibodies, or immunoglobulins IgA, IgM, IgG, IgD, and IgE and each class serves a different function. Those formed in response to allergens belong to the IgE class, which normally function to attack parasitic worms.
IgE antibodies bind to the allergen, such as pollen molecules, as well as two types of defensive cells: mast cells (found in the nose, skin, lungs and gastrointestinal tract) and basophils (found mostly in the blood).
These cells then release a series of chemicals called mediators, which cause the sneezing, runny nose, itching and other symptoms of an allergic reaction. Probably the best known of these mediators is histamine.
Because some mediators work very quickly, symptoms that are caused by the mediators occur almost instantly after exposure to an allergen. These symptoms might include dripping from the nose or eyes, sneezing, wheezing, hives, or itching.
Shortly after your mediators have been released, a type of white blood cell called an called an eosinophil begins to be attracted to the site of the reaction. Eosinophils can accumulate over the course of several days or longer. The result is a more intense reaction with congestion of the tissue symptoms might include nasal congestion (a stuffy nose), persisting asthma symptoms, or rashes.
Reactions can be most obvious where the allergens are in a high concentration. So, if you inhale an allergen, you'll experience most of your symptoms within the nose and upper airways. If an allergen enters the bloodstream, its effects can be more far reaching: A food allergen can cause not only gastrointestinal problems, but also hives or other skin rashes.
Who's At Risk?
If you have allergies, you're in good company. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases estimates that 50 million Americans one in five of us has some form of regular allergy.
Costs
All told, allergies rank sixth in cost on the list of chronic diseases in the United States. Each year, Americans lose 3½ million work days because of allergies at a cost of $639 million. Children lose about 2 million school days. Allergies cost about $2 billion a year in treatment, tests, medications and allergy shots, and require nearly 8½ million physician visits.
How Allergies Develop
How people become allergic is still something of a mystery. Experts know it begins with what is called sensitization a period that ranges from a few weeks to several decades, in which repeated exposure to a particular allergen activates the immune system to attempt to fight what is usually an innocuous substance. Because this period of sensitization varies so much, one person can develop a contact allergy during infancy while another may not be sensitized until adulthood. Still, most allergies become apparent in childhood especially inhalant reactions like hay fever. Some children can outgrow one allergy only to develop another later in life. Adults seldom develop new allergies after age 40, but rarely outgrow those they have, although sometimes reactions become less severe with age.
Risk Factors
Regardless of when they begin or what symptoms they cause, most allergies seem to be caused by the same risk factors:
Still, children from the same family may not get the same allergies. Studies show that only 25 percent to 50 percent of identical twins share the same type of allergy. In many cases, one twin will have allergies and the other won't. This means environment is an important factor, too.