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Balant wrote:

>

> Does anyone know if allergy testing is safe for people with Graves'?

That would depend on the method of testing.

Skin testing is dangerous for anyone with severe allergies (peanut

protein allergies can trigger terrible responses from trivial amounts),

I doubt it is especially dangerous for the autoimmune patient but who knows.

The NIH have given some sort of blessing to immuno-cap testing, meaning

they accept it isn't complete hocus pocus like some allergy testing

methods I suspect.

This is a screen for reactivity to wide number of allergens using a

blood sample, this avoids putting the person in touch with the

allergens, which is safer.

It isn't cheap (150GBP so about 200 to 250 USD?), but typically will

highlight a selection of food that might be a problem for you. Some labs

offer a moderate 50 foodstuffs test, and a full 200+ items.

" might be a problem " is a key aspect as there are issues over

interpretation, still when I pondered allergy testing this looked like

the right sort of approach.

Simon

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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

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Balant wrote:

>

> Does anyone know if allergy testing is safe for people with Graves'?

That would depend on the method of testing.

Skin testing is dangerous for anyone with severe allergies (peanut

protein allergies can trigger terrible responses from trivial amounts),

I doubt it is especially dangerous for the autoimmune patient but who knows.

The NIH have given some sort of blessing to immuno-cap testing, meaning

they accept it isn't complete hocus pocus like some allergy testing

methods I suspect.

This is a screen for reactivity to wide number of allergens using a

blood sample, this avoids putting the person in touch with the

allergens, which is safer.

It isn't cheap (150GBP so about 200 to 250 USD?), but typically will

highlight a selection of food that might be a problem for you. Some labs

offer a moderate 50 foodstuffs test, and a full 200+ items.

" might be a problem " is a key aspect as there are issues over

interpretation, still when I pondered allergy testing this looked like

the right sort of approach.

Simon

-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----

Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org

iD8DBQE+hIs5GFXfHI9FVgYRApmNAJ9nIL0PDHCMQNGQ0MHcc0X+09IHjQCcCnSb

OCZCDHE2bgYh2rtlc9YMYU0=

=rBuv

-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----

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