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Article ID # 20041408
Nothing to Sneeze At
by Carole Poole
Energy Times, August 14, 2004
To many, nothing is more annoying than a persistent allergy. Runny nose, itchy
eyes, hives, sneezing, coughing...Frequently, allergies seem to represent suffering
with no end.
When you are sensitive to something in your environment, often
your only hope for relief appears to be to flee to an elsewhere that eludes
the problematic, trouble-making allergen.
Complementary measures are available that can lower your risk of allergic reactions.
Heading off allergic reactions before they strike can help you enter a comfort
zone that leaves nothing to sneeze at.
Limit Your Antibiotics
While people have always suffered allergies, today, many experts agree, allergies
are on the rise. One possible explanation: antibiotics. For instance, research
at the Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit demonstrates that kids who get antibiotics
within six months of being born run an increased risk
of being allergic to dust mites, ragweed, grass and animals. At the same time,
if two or more cats or dogs live with them, they reduce their chances of allergies
(Eur Respir Soc ann conf, 2003).
"
I'm not suggesting children shouldn't receive antibiotics. But I believe we
need to be more prudent in prescribing them for children at such an early age," Christine
Cole Johnson, PhD, says. "In the past, many of them were prescribed unnecessarily,
especially for viral infections like colds and the flu when they would have
no effect anyway."
Dr. Cole's investigators found that by age 7, kids who got one or more rounds
of antibiotics were:
• 1.5 times more likely to develop allergies
• 2.5 times more likely to develop asthma
• Twice as likely to get allergies if their mothers had allergies
When antibiotics are necessary, they are crucial to quelling bacterial infections.
However, if you or your children suffer colds or flus, diseases caused by viruses,
antibiotics have no effect on your illness but could increase your chance of
developing allergies.
"
Over the past four decades there has been an explosive increase in allergy
and asthma in westernized countries, which correlates with widespread use of
antibiotics and alterations in gastrointestinal (GI) microflora," says
Mairi Noverr, a researcher on a study linking allergies to antibiotic use (104th
Gen Meet Amer Soc Microbiol, 2004). "We propose that the link between
antibiotic use and dysregulated pulmonary immunity is through antibiotic-induced
long-term alterations in the bacterial and fungal GI microflora."
While a lot of research needs to be done, it may help to fortify the probiotic,
or good, microbes in your intestines with probiotic supplements. One study
has shown that giving probiotics to pregnant women helped their children avoid
allergic eczema, a skin condition (Lancet 2001; 357:1076-9).
Green Tea Relief
Research has demonstrated that various types of tea can produce a range of
health benefits. Tea drinkers can add allergy relief to that list.
Research in Japan demonstrates that for the allergy-oppressed, green tea may
help them have nothing to sneeze at. In laboratory tests, scientist found that
green tea contains a substance that blocks one of the immune cell receptors
which is often a part of the allergic response. The substance, methylated epigallocatechin
gallate (EGCG), is believed to have a similar effect in the real world (J Agr
Food Chem 10/9/02).
"
Green tea appears to be a promising source for effective anti-allergenic agents," notes
Hirofumi Tachibana, PhD, the study's chief investigator and an associate professor
at Kyushu University in Fukuoka. "If you have allergies, you should consider
drinking it."
Traditionally, many people have consumed tea as part of their effort to suppress
sneezes, coughs and itchy eyes caused by allergies. This experiment supports
the evidence that green tea, in particular, has a reliable effect.
According to Dr. Tachibana, green tea's anti-allergenic benefits have not been
completely established, but tea apparently has the potential to be effective
against allergens like dust, chemicals, pet dander and pollen.
Tea Antioxidant
EGCG has also been shown to be a very active antioxidant, helping to quell
the destructive effects of the caustic molecules known as free radicals.
Green tea is richer in EGCG than black tea or oolong tea (a type that falls
between black and green).
Although other research has demonstrated that EGCG offsets allergic responses
in lab animals fed this substance, scientists don't completely understand why
it works for allergies. Researchers theorize that EGCG restricts the production
of histamine and immunoglobulin E (IgE), two substances secreted in the body
as part of the chain of chemical reactions that lead to an allergic reaction,
says Dr. Tachibana.
This study shows, for the first time, that a methylated form of EGCG can block
the IgE receptor, which is a key receptor involved in an allergic response.
The effect was demonstrated using human basophils, which are blood cells that
release histamine.
As of now, nobody knows how much green tea you need to guzzle to have the best
protection against allergies and, of the several varieties available, nobody
knows which green tea is best.
Outside of the US, green tea is the second most popular beverage in the world,
right behind water. In the US, however, black tea is more popular than green.
But the allergy sensitive should think and drink green.
Stay Away from Diesels
Those who are allergic to ragweed or pet dander usually know they should avoid
the source of their allergies. But now scientists have found that, for many
allergy sufferers, diesel exhaust can also worsen sneezes and wheezes.
Scientists at two southern California schools have shown that about half of
us have inherited a sensitivity to diesel pollution that can make our allergies
significantly worse (Lancet 1/10/04). "[T]his study suggests a direct
way that pollution could be triggering allergies and asthma in a large number
of susceptible individuals...," says Frank D. Gilliland, MD, PhD, the
study's lead author.
Diesel exhaust particles are thought to act as destructive free radicals in
the lungs, forming caustic molecules that damage lung tissue. This irritation
can cause your immune system to create larger amounts of compounds that make
you sneeze and wheeze more.
The Antioxidant Advantage
Antioxidants, scientists believe, can help defuse this damage and ease the
body's allergic responses. The California scientists looked at two antioxidant
enzymes the body makes to protect the lungs called glutathione S-transferase
M1 (GSTM1) and glutathione
S-transferase P1 (GSTP1). Only about five of ten people's immune systems can
make all the effective forms of these enzymes. The rest of us lack this protection
to some degree, and the immune system in about one in five people can't make
any effective form of these enzymes.
The research team found that people allergic to ragweed who lacked these antioxidant
enzymes suffered more when they took in both ragweed pollen and particles from
diesel pollution.
Breathe Easier With C
This research may help explain why many health practitioners recommend vitamin
C, a potent antioxidant, to allergy sufferers. Vitamin C "prevents the
secretion of histamine by the white blood cells, increases the detoxification
of histamine and lowers the blood-histamine levels," says Sylvia Goldfarb,
PhD, author of Allergy Relief (Avery/Penguin).
Scientists continue to study the allergy conundrum. Meanwhile, sip a cup of
green tea and shut the window before the next truck comes by.
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