What is an allergy and how does medicine help against it?

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What is an allergy and how does medicine help against it?

In: Biology

2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Allergies are essentially your immune system reacting to non harmful things as if they were actual threats. Sometimes the reaction is minor other times it’s potentially out of control. When your immune system detects an allergen it sends out histamines. These chemicals bind to certain cells telling them to swell amongst other things

In the case of a normal infection the swelling is useful for getting more blood flow and immune cells to the infection site. In this case there is nothing there. And more importantly the immune system is panicking in the more severe allergies causing the release of too many histamines creating out of control and often dangerous swelling.

Allergy medication neutrally binds to either the receptors on the cell or the histamine itself in order to prevent them from interacting and creating that immune response. Though this is an extremely oversimplified view. The full biological mechanics are very much beyond me.

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