Science
Related: About this forumWhat the Mystery of the Tick-Borne Meat Allergy Could Reveal
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/24/magazine/what-the-mystery-of-the-tick-borne-meat-allergy-could-reveal.htmlWhat the Mystery of the Tick-Borne Meat Allergy Could Reveal
Unraveling why tick bites are suddenly causing a strange reaction in some people who eat meat could help scientists better understand how all allergies work.
By Moises Velasquez-Manoff
July 24, 2018
One spring evening in 2016, Lee Niegelskys underarm began to itch. An investment manager, he was doing housework around his condo, and he thought hed been bitten by a chigger. But within 15 minutes, hives had erupted all over his body. He responded with what he calls a typical man reaction if the hives didnt clear up by the next day, he would have them checked. Fifteen minutes later, the itch had become unbearable. He needed help right away.
His wife wasnt home, so he drove himself to the university hospital emergency room near where he lived in Chapel Hill, N.C. As he explained his symptoms at the check-in counter, he began to feel faint, then fell to one knee. An orderly offered a wheelchair. He sat down and promptly lost consciousness.
When he came to, he was on the floor. He had rolled out of the wheelchair and hit his head. A gaggle of worried-looking medical staff stood over him. They asked if he was on drugs. Did he have heart problems? His blood pressure was extremely low, probably the reason he had passed out. Niegelsky, who was 58, told them that he was healthy and drug-free and had no heart condition. I could see the concern on their faces in a way that did not help my confidence level at all, Niegelsky says.
He felt as if insects were biting every inch of his hands, armpits and groin. A doctor asked if he had any food allergies. The hives and the low blood pressure suggested anaphylaxis, a severe allergic reaction. Again the answer was no, but Niegelsky did recall that he had a very bad allergic reaction a month earlier to a tick bite he got at a concert.
The E.R. doctor ordered two shots of epinephrine, also known as adrenaline, to dampen the allergic reaction; the hives and itching began to subside about 25 minutes later. Now the doctor asked Niegelsky what hed eaten that day. A hamburger for lunch, Niegelsky told him. In his recollection, the doctors eyes widened, and he said, I think we know what you have a condition called mammalian-meat allergy.
Meat allergy was first observed in the 1990s and formally described in 2009, which makes it a relatively recent arrival to the compendium of allergic conditions. Its most curious quality may be that it is seemingly triggered by a tick bite. In America, the culprit, called the lone-star tick females have a distinctive white splotch on their backs is common in the warm and humid Southeast, where most cases of meat allergy have been diagnosed. Niegelsky had in fact heard about the allergy from friends. He remembers shaking his head and thinking that it sounded made up. He understood now, in a visceral way, how real it was. That bite from a month ago had primed his body for todays hives and plummeting blood pressure.
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redstateblues
(10,565 posts)I had a high rating on the Alfa gal blood test. It explained the hives Ive been battling for several years. Ive been gradually reintroducing dairy back int to my diet with some success.
Judi Lynn
(160,623 posts)What you have sounds exactly like the article, and what I heard on our local tv news.
What a horrible experience!
Very best wishes for your complete recovery.
underpants
(182,879 posts)Interesting
Duppers
(28,127 posts)More people should be bitten by lone star ticks so we'd stop eating mammals.
Only half-way kidding here, since I object to killing mammals and eating red meat. Sorry, folks, I love some critters more than others. Ideally and seriously we all should be vegetarians.
I grew up in a family of carnivores and ate red meat most of my life, unfortunately. I've now successfully given it up for almost a dozen yrs.
Btw, I well know anaphylactic shock is nothing to laugh at; it put me in the ER not just once but twice. The last time they had to keep me for hours and IV me to get my reaction to stop. I was swollen like a blimp and was difficult for me to breathe.