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High Levels Of Airborne Mouse Allergen In Inner-City Homes Could Trigger Asthma Attacks
February 12, 2005 The amount of mouse allergen found in the air in many inner-city homes could be high enough to trigger asthma symptoms in the children who live there, say researchers at the Johns Hopkins ... > full story -
New Research Could Help Physicians Tailor Asthma Therapy In Children
February 1, 2005 Researchers have identified specific asthma characteristics in children that could help determine the type of asthma treatment they will best respond to. These findings were published in the February ... > full story -
Healthy Mix Of GI Tract Microbes Are Key To Preventing Allergies And Asthma
January 11, 2005 In the January 2005 issue of Infection & Immunity, U-M researchers report new evidence suggesting that changes in the normal mixture of microflora – bacteria and fungi in the ... > full story -
Young Volunteers Needed For Stanford/Packard Study
November 23, 2004 Itchy red spots on a baby's skin often foretell a worse fate. Asthma later develops in approximately 50 percent of children who have a sibling with eczema or asthma and who, in their early years, ... > full story -
Millions Who Suffer From Nut And Milk Allergies Could Benefit From Stanford Researcher’s Successful Tests Of New Vaccines In Dogs
November 23, 2004 A team led by a researcher at the Stanford University School of Medicine has developed vaccines that vastly reduce or eliminate dogs’ allergic reactions to three major food allergens: peanuts, ... > full story -
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Children's Health
Attention Deficit Disorder
Infant's Health
Diet and Weight Loss
Epilepsy Research
'Outgrown' A Peanut Allergy? Monthly Ingestion Appears To Boost Peanut Tolerance
November 16, 2004 Children who outgrow peanut allergy have a slight chance of recurrence, but researchers from the Johns Hopkins Children's Center report that the risk is much lower in children who frequently eat ... > full story -
Millions Who Suffer From Nut And Milk Allergies Could Benefit From Stanford Researcher’s Successful Tests Of New Vaccines In Dogs
November 15, 2004 A team led by a researcher at the Stanford University School of Medicine has developed vaccines that vastly reduce or eliminate dogs’ allergic reactions to three major food allergens: peanuts, ... > full story -
Some Allergic Conditions Increase Risk Of Blood Cancer, Study Finds
November 3, 2004 Some allergic conditions could increase your risk of suffering from blood cancer as an adult, according to a new study published this week in BMC Public Health. This is important news for the ... > full story -
Researchers Identify A Protein That Could Banish Allergies
October 21, 2004 The suffering of millions of people with allergies could one day be eased thanks to new research from UK investigators. Findings from the University College London branch of the Ludwig Institute for ... > full story -
Chronic Sinusitis Sufferers Have Enhanced Immune Responses To Fungi
October 12, 2004 Scientists supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, have discovered that people with chronic sinus inflammation have ... > full story
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