Why Are So Many People Allergic To Food?

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  • čas přidán 19. 03. 2019
  • You can learn more at curiositystream.com/smart
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    More people have food allergies than ever before. Peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, eggs, and even milk… the list of possibly dangerous foods seems to get longer every day. But why do some people’s bodies have deadly reactions food? And why are food allergies on the rise? In this video we explain what food allergies really are, and what the difference is between food allergy and food intolerance. Some fellow CZcamsrs tell us their stories of what it’s like to live with food allergies, and we bring you the best current science on how to prevent food allergies in kids and adults. It’s a tough nut to crack. #FoodAllergy #Allergies #FoodScience
    Special thanks to WheezyWaiter and Emily Graslie for sharing their food allergy stories with us!
    / wheezywaiter
    / thebrainscoop
    Want to learn more about allergies? Watch this: • %$?# Allergies!
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    REFERENCES:
    Anagnostou, Katherine, and Andrew Clark. "Oral immunotherapy for peanut allergy." Annual review of medicine 67 (2016): 375-385.
    Sathe, S. K., Liu, C., & Zaffran, V. D. (2016). "Food allergy." Annual review of food science and technology, 7, 191-220.
    Tyagi, Nidhi, et al. "Comparisons of allergenic and metazoan parasite proteins: allergy the price of immunity." PLoS computational biology 11.10 (2015): e1004546.
    Willits, Erin K., et al. "Food Allergy: A Comprehensive Population-Based Cohort Study." Mayo Clinic Proceedings. Vol. 93. No. 10. Elsevier, 2018.
    Wong, L., Huang, C. H., & Lee, B. W. (2016). "Shellfish and house dust mite allergies: is the link tropomyosin?." Allergy, asthma & immunology research, 8(2), 101-106.
    -----------
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Komentáře • 7K

  • @besmart
    @besmart  Před 5 lety +1399

    A big thanks to Craig and Emily for sharing their allergy stories. Do you know anyone with a food allergy? Share this video with them! I'm on Twitter and Instagram at @DrJoeHanson

    • @mason308y8
      @mason308y8 Před 5 lety +11

      It's Okay To Be Smart I’m allergic to peanuts I hate it

    • @remas5200
      @remas5200 Před 5 lety +16

      When I was a baby I was deathly allergic to peanuts all peanuts. Later I developed a peach and egg allergy and milk. Now in adulthood I’m still allergic to eggs, I’m afraid to eat any sort of shellfish. I’m milk intolerant and allergic to bananas and now the last few years bread and wheat products have been making me sick. It’s frustrating and I’m kind of afraid to get food allergy tested because then I’ll find I can’t eat anything! And I love food lol 😂

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe Před 5 lety +3

      Hey Joe Hansen. You should go vegan for a month and make a video about it. It would be great.

    • @wheezywaiter
      @wheezywaiter Před 5 lety +2

      @@lakrids-pibe It's been done.

    • @crazialex
      @crazialex Před 5 lety +1

      Great video i like the part when mat pat (from game theory) is there

  • @kedrekmartinez9336
    @kedrekmartinez9336 Před 2 lety +857

    I've been allergic to peanuts my whole life and I find it comically ridiculous that my body's reaction to peanuts is basically, "Hey this might be harmful, let me kill you before it get the chance to".

    • @papertowels9162
      @papertowels9162 Před 2 lety +118

      It's a funny thing. I'm the same and it really is crazy to think that my body's response to peanuts is, "If you put this in me, I will NOT hesitate to self destruct."

    • @jekdawg1005
      @jekdawg1005 Před 2 lety +29

      Dude I can't even smell peanuts or I can go into antifliatic shock :/

    • @AMABELTVHD
      @AMABELTVHD Před 2 lety +7

      It is a real bad joke.

    • @bustergundo516
      @bustergundo516 Před 2 lety +9

      @@papertowels9162 *I will initiate self destruct* the body is weird sometimes.

    • @FathDaniel
      @FathDaniel Před 2 lety +1

      There is the venom theory of peanut butter allergies. There was a CZcams clip on seeker.

  • @chuckasualty
    @chuckasualty Před 5 lety +5140

    I love how my package of almonds has a warning label on the back that says 'CONTAINS ALMOND'😋

    • @radhiadeedou8286
      @radhiadeedou8286 Před 5 lety +443

      You gotta protect yourself from idiots

    • @CerebrumMortum
      @CerebrumMortum Před 5 lety +450

      This is a very very US thing. In most countries, stupidity is not protected by law

    • @unfetteredparacosmian
      @unfetteredparacosmian Před 5 lety +348

      Package clearly labeled as "walnuts"
      INGREDIENTS: SHELLED WALNUTS
      WARNING: CONTAINS WALNUTS

    • @fuzzypenguino
      @fuzzypenguino Před 5 lety +130

      or even worse, when a bar of milk chocolate says "made on equipment that processes milk" but not "contains milk" even though milk is.in the ingredients

    • @junkowl7539
      @junkowl7539 Před 5 lety +57

      Retards will sue

  • @dothedotxom
    @dothedotxom Před 2 lety +248

    I’ve been allergic to eggs, dairy, and tree nuts since a child and I’ve never really thought about it, I’ve just always instinctively looked at the ingredients of foods

    • @frn.08
      @frn.08 Před 2 lety +5

      Same I have the same allergies.

    • @suryadamemer9405
      @suryadamemer9405 Před 2 lety +2

      Same same same but all nuts

    • @dothedotxom
      @dothedotxom Před 2 lety +1

      @@suryadamemer9405 yeah me too forgot to list that, that’s weird it looks like these allergies are common

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Před 2 lety +7

      I recently got myself into being a prediabetic, and now I have to check labels for carbs and fiber content.
      As someone who never had to think of ingredients for 50 years, it's *really* annoying.

    • @davidontiveros554
      @davidontiveros554 Před 2 lety

      When I told my friends I have peanut allergies and I have to read food labels they were shocked, like I find it no problem to look at ingredients but since they never do it’s a shocker to them

  • @carlchapman4053
    @carlchapman4053 Před 2 lety +135

    I grew up with a friend who had a nut allergy (This was back in the 80's before allergies were even accepted as a thing) but he didn't just react to nuts but would react to other people who had touched or eaten nuts, so if we had nuts we had to warn him to avoid skin contact for the rest of the day, he called it 'Essence of Nut'. He was the only person I knew with a food allergy first the first 21 years of my life.

    • @davemiller6055
      @davemiller6055 Před 2 lety +3

      It's not that they weren't accepted as a thing, they weren't a thing. Far fewer people had allergies and nobody died from allergies. You blew your nose, took an antihistamine and that was it. Nowdays people die from peanuts and nobody questions why? We ate gobs of peanuts in the 70s and 80s and nobody was allergic to them.

    • @duxdog
      @duxdog Před 2 lety +4

      @@davemiller6055 its also not big in other parts of the world like china. I think it has something to do with our diet and the toxins in the food eaten during pregnancy. your diet also effects which bacteria we have in our gut which may be the reason for the overreaction to the allergens.

    • @PenguinCrayon269
      @PenguinCrayon269 Před 2 lety +1

      @@davemiller6055 nut allergy is non existant in indonesia. and i guess other 3rd world country too.

    • @davemiller6055
      @davemiller6055 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@duxdog I'm pretty sure it's the glyphosate and GMO foods.

    • @davemiller6055
      @davemiller6055 Před 2 lety +1

      @@PenguinCrayon269 I'm pretty sure it's the glyphosate and GMO foods.

  • @niklasvilhelm7247
    @niklasvilhelm7247 Před 2 lety +1644

    Allergies is basically a guy shooting at a spider with a bazooka inside his house

    • @lukesmeby
      @lukesmeby Před 2 lety +60

      More like a ant lol

    • @niklasvilhelm7247
      @niklasvilhelm7247 Před 2 lety +41

      @@lukesmeby a ghost

    • @tubularfantasy
      @tubularfantasy Před 2 lety +25

      Im allergic to cold so in the winter i have to go fast or i start to itch

    • @AramatiPaz
      @AramatiPaz Před 2 lety +20

      @@tubularfantasy defuq, allergic to cold? And I though that Renaud's syndrome was a problem.

    • @tubularfantasy
      @tubularfantasy Před 2 lety +12

      @@AramatiPaz yea i know its weird

  • @Mono_324
    @Mono_324 Před 4 lety +2069

    My uncle is extremely allergic to garlic, he might be a vampire.

    • @gonzo4350
      @gonzo4350 Před 4 lety +90

      Try a black light just in case

    • @ranadushyant
      @ranadushyant Před 4 lety +88

      Do you see his reflection 😅😈

    • @mailasun
      @mailasun Před 4 lety +55

      Have you ever observed him going to the beach?

    • @edward_gomez
      @edward_gomez Před 4 lety +42

      BLAH , BLAH BLAH

    • @change9517
      @change9517 Před 4 lety +33

      Wish he is not Korean.. Yeah we put Garlic everywhere..

  • @debbiehenri345
    @debbiehenri345 Před 2 lety +18

    I believe the answer lies in pesticides and herbicides - glyphosate in particular.
    I'm a gardener and remember well when glyphosate was introduced, my boss showing off that 'It's so safe, you can practically drink it!'
    (Yes, he actually said that).
    Up to its introduction, I didn't know a single person with an allergy - then suddenly kids were getting strawberry and then nut allergies. I'm not saying such allergies didn't exist before, there's always going to be some with weaker systems who develop allergies to something, but this was on an escalating scale.
    By the very fact that it's already been proved glyphosate has a very negative influence on the complex bioflora in your gut (killing it, in short), then those parasites you mention may come in when your bioflora is particularly 'low' and do some 'damage' then.
    Look how the number of people with allergies has increased over the years. Look at the number of those who have developed intolerances.
    Can it be any 'mere' coincidence that the increase in allergy/intolerance cases happens at the same time the farming industry has in fact 'increased' its usage of glyphosate (from merely clearing fields of weeds to 'deliberately' spraying grain crops to desiccate all the plants for harvest at the optimum time)?
    My family never had one instance of an allergy or even an intolerance - and now several of us have them: gluten, milk, food colouring, meat, eggs, bananas.
    Meal times for us are more like a chemistry lesson now!

  • @alexsampson2630
    @alexsampson2630 Před 2 lety +73

    Just letting people know if you suddenly have a reaction involving whole body swelling/rash and you don't know what caused it, check to see If you have changed your washing powder. Some washing powders contain methisothiazolinone or benzisothiazolinone that can cause allergies in some people myself included. You may be allergic to one or both of these.

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Před 2 lety +4

      I'm guessing Tide has one or both of those in it because even smelling Tide on other people's clothes makes me ill. :P

    • @johndripper
      @johndripper Před 2 lety +1

      Only swelling I get are from insect bites 😂

    • @miguelangeljerez_arts
      @miguelangeljerez_arts Před rokem

      @@johndripper Same thing bro, specifically for the bee stings 🤣

    • @Crafty_Breeze
      @Crafty_Breeze Před 6 měsíci +1

      God, who named those powders I had a stroke trying to read it

    • @alexsampson2630
      @alexsampson2630 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Crafty_Breeze Yeah those words aren't good for people with hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia either 😂

  • @beefybread5769
    @beefybread5769 Před 4 lety +355

    Nobody can die, if nobody is there to kill.
    -Immune System on how to stop sickness

  • @RobinYdal
    @RobinYdal Před 5 lety +1706

    When I was a kid I wasn’t allergic to nuts at all and ate them regularly, but one day at the age of, I think 9 I ate a hazelnut (which I had eaten before) and got an intense reaction for no reason. I then got tested for nut allergy and it ended up showing not only hazelnut but a pretty strong allergy to most nuts excluding almonds.
    I’m now 23 and about 2 years ago after having avoided all nuts but almonds since I got tested I tried just a tiny bit of peanut butter (which might have been stupid but that’s what I did) and waited for a while without any reaction, so I tried it again and still nothing. Eventually I tried a whole peanut butter sandwich and I had no reaction what so ever. I then tried nutella which has hazelnut in it which is what I was the most allergic to and I had absolutely no reaction.
    I can now eat every kind of nut that I had become allergic to even if it isn’t processed into any food product without any reaction. So I went from having no allergy to being strongly allergic to all nuts back to not being allergic to them at all.

    • @animefan1204
      @animefan1204 Před 5 lety +215

      waddafq

    • @randomuser3561
      @randomuser3561 Před 5 lety +422

      Allergies have bipolar disorder confirmed

    • @wocky661
      @wocky661 Před 5 lety +103

      Peanuts aren't tree nuts at all, so it's normal that there was no reaction (same for almonds) But the allergy disappearing is sure wierd. We also can't have a reaction for something we have never been in contact with as the first time it enters our bodies, out immune system only flags the proteins as dangerous, they only react at the second exposure. (the wikipedia page is more precise about it if you want to know more)

    • @emosterjpeg5000
      @emosterjpeg5000 Před 5 lety +41

      aha wow, thats incredible. the closest i know of a similar situation is my brother, super allergic to dairy. he had some cocoa pebbles which apparently didn't have dairy before, but my mom rechecked the box after he ate a bowl, but he never had a reaction, and we never told him in case it would bring on the reaction late ahah

    • @miriaichan1471
      @miriaichan1471 Před 5 lety +43

      YOUR INTERNAL BODY SYSTEMS ARE DRUNK WTH

  • @Graywolf304
    @Graywolf304 Před 2 lety +48

    Growing up, I was severely allergic to lots of things. I was allergic to peanuts, treenuts, seafood, peas, beans, and probably a few others I can't remember. It was bad enough to the point that just the smell of some of these things, especially peanuts, could trigger anaphylaxis. Now things are better, but growing up knowing they eating ant of these things could potentially kill me has really affected me. I still refuse to eat any of these foods, although now I am only allergic to peanuts, and maybe nuts. I have been doing the microdosing he was talking about for peanuts for a few years now, so that has greatly helped me with that allergy. Now I can truly eat anywhere, and almost anything. Before it, I had to bring my own food to restaurants, and that really sucked.
    Sorry for the whole essay here

    • @birbwatcher5677
      @birbwatcher5677 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/DTp53E9F1yM/video.html

    • @abirajNYC
      @abirajNYC Před 2 lety +1

      That's wonderful. I'm going to try this with my daughter.

    • @2GoatsInATrenchCoat
      @2GoatsInATrenchCoat Před 2 lety +2

      @@abirajNYC please talk to a doctor first before just trying exposure therapy with your daughter. you may not give her the correct amount for it to be safe or in the appropriate intervals, or that type of therapy may not be right for her.

    • @abirajNYC
      @abirajNYC Před 2 lety

      @@2GoatsInATrenchCoat yes her allergist is who I was referring.

    • @lkjhb1
      @lkjhb1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@abirajNYC A lot of city kids have food allergies. I think it's the pollution in cities causing the food allergies

  • @PillzmansFox
    @PillzmansFox Před 2 lety +22

    It's strange, my brother was deathly allergic to shellfish and seafood and an intolerance to dairy when he was younger, he ate shellfish on accident ( I think it was seafood salad in a conch noodle) and nothing happened when before we had to rush him to a hospital from a restaurant (before we knew) and he no longer has problems with dairy, but now I have problems with dairy around the same time he was fine with dairy.

    • @willislau22
      @willislau22 Před 9 měsíci

      Proves it's contagious😂

    • @kimmuckenfuss2284
      @kimmuckenfuss2284 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I'm thinking sometimes allergies may be related to or be an indicator of the strength of a person's immune system at any given point in time. So, take for example your brother...maybe @ one time his immune system was compromised @ the time he ate seafood that he had the allergic reaction to. Fast forward a period of time, he accidentally eats something he's supposed to be allergic to & nothing happens. Honestly, I can't prove it, but since allergies are so intertwined with the immune system & responses...I would almost put money on this hypothesis. Maybe in the future you won't have problems with dairy if your immune system improves? I'm not saying go drink milk or anything, but maybe speak w/your doctor about the possibility.

  • @appa609
    @appa609 Před 4 lety +264

    The immune system is like the abusive older brother who protects you when the school bully comes but also beats you up in front of your friends.

    • @appa609
      @appa609 Před 3 lety +7

      @Agent 32 Aww :(

    • @danisoup
      @danisoup Před 3 lety +8

      @Agent 32 your brother cant see

    • @thegodhimself5554
      @thegodhimself5554 Před 2 lety

      More like the older brother that beats up your new boyfriend/girlfriend when they try to take you out for dinner

    • @thegodhimself5554
      @thegodhimself5554 Před 2 lety +1

      @Agent 32 if you need help, I don't think the youtube comments are the place dude.

    • @flowersmakemehappy834
      @flowersmakemehappy834 Před rokem

      Big boy bullie..

  • @isabelsy
    @isabelsy Před 5 lety +719

    Brain: Eat food or we die
    Me: Ok
    Brain: Oh and also don't eat food or we die
    Me: Oh o.....wtf?

    • @TheDrexxus
      @TheDrexxus Před 5 lety +60

      Sad thing is this is very true for Oxygen. Need it to live, but it's also highly corrosive and slowly killing you.
      Dammit. :(

    • @Saedris
      @Saedris Před 5 lety +4

      @@TheDrexxus how? is that why we age

    • @DJJonPattrsn22
      @DJJonPattrsn22 Před 5 lety +29

      @@Saedris That explains why "antioxidants" are good!

    • @animapringleot7381
      @animapringleot7381 Před 5 lety +10

      I-....I give up

    • @PandaLuver1996
      @PandaLuver1996 Před 5 lety +12

      To be honest as soon as we are born into this world, everything is actively and slowly aging and killing you 😂😂

  • @clave26
    @clave26 Před 2 lety +6

    I learned about food allergy in the United States. It's soooo common there and not in my country, Mexico. Further than that, in 1993, it was shocking for me to know about dogs (also in the U. S.) being allergic to certain kind of food!

  • @noneyobidness3253
    @noneyobidness3253 Před 2 lety +15

    I wonder if that weird, sudden allergic reaction to almond milk could have been cross contamination in the production process. It could be from completely unrelated vegetable matter that could have intruded the product. It used to happen in the middle ages when toxic weed grain, stems and even pollens would get mixed in the flours. Baking got rid of a lot of issues but some people still randomly died just from eating common food.

  • @whistlesongwriter8320
    @whistlesongwriter8320 Před 4 lety +582

    I took a blood test...
    Results: “congratulations, you have the possibility of developing over 10 different allergies”
    Thank you, I’ll just eat air then.

    • @Sea_Leech
      @Sea_Leech Před 3 lety +1

      @Adam Czerniewski no, then he will eat everything, and not eat air

    • @nicholashobart8140
      @nicholashobart8140 Před 3 lety +5

      Wanna know the worst allergy I’ve ever seen? Someone allergic to the sun

    • @RocRailfan
      @RocRailfan Před 3 lety +7

      I’m allergic to Every type of nut, egg, milk, peas, bananas and oranges. God I hate my life.

    • @Tara-id3rk
      @Tara-id3rk Před 3 lety +7

      The POSSIBILITY of developing 😂 don’t start getting all sassy until you actually HAVE the allergies. I have two kids with 15 allergens I have to cook for. THATS a pain in the butt.

    • @RocRailfan
      @RocRailfan Před 3 lety +1

      Tara 907 I’m sure my mom feels your pain too. Lol. Oh well though, not my fault I have allergies!

  • @JEBavido
    @JEBavido Před 5 lety +560

    Not being taken seriously is frustrating. I was at the pharmacy to pick up my epipen renewal, and the pharmacy tech asked, just out of curiosity, why I needed it.
    Me, “I’m allergic to ant bites. Deathly allergic.”
    Him, “That’s just formic acid. You can’t be allergic to that.”
    Me, after a very long pause, “You’re an idiot.”

    • @nploda1408
      @nploda1408 Před 5 lety +98

      Most Pharmacists I've met are pretentious assholes like that, thinking they know it all. They are bitter because they couldn't go to medical school and had to settle for pharmacy school. Lol.

    • @steeldragonjovi
      @steeldragonjovi Před 4 lety +133

      Donnie Badfish now that’s just rude to people who worked hard to become a pharmacist and truly care for their patients.

    • @nploda1408
      @nploda1408 Před 4 lety +17

      @@steeldragonjovi hey, I'm just calling it like I see it.
      ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

    • @steeldragonjovi
      @steeldragonjovi Před 4 lety +81

      Donnie Badfish fair enough. That’s too bad you’ve come across such negative professionals. I’m a pharmacist, but I have respect and compassion for my patients, so I would hope they’d say something different! Lol 😜

    • @nploda1408
      @nploda1408 Před 4 lety +58

      @@steeldragonjovi cool. Maybe I shouldn't have made such a blanket statement. I've actually had good pharmacists. They were all at small mom-and-pop pharmacies though. The ones that have been jerks were all at big box stores like Walgreens or Wal-Mart.

  • @isabelle8613
    @isabelle8613 Před 2 lety +9

    I've literally always been allergic to peanuts, yet when i was younger my family had no idea that peanuts was causing my eczema and now hives. but the worst thing was that when i was younger is that peanuts were my favourite thing, i used to eat them in almost every single meal- but slowly as the years have gone by my allergies to peanuts have gotten worse, i never got a epipen from a doctor bc my allergies have never been serious enough and my reaction to peanuts is usually onset, but last week i ate a candy bar with peanuts in it that didnt say it had on in the front of the package (i dont usually check labels if im being honest) so i ate it but after tasting the peanuts i spit it right out, i probably swallowed now even half a peanut bc i took a small bite, but regardless of that how 5 days later im covered in hives and my face has been swollen for the past two days

  • @tagAught
    @tagAught Před 2 lety +4

    Interesting. My middle sister was *born* with nasty allergies - the only fabric that could touch her skin for a couple of years was cotton washed in Ivory Snow, otherwise she'd go bright red all over and her skin would start cracking. Unsurprisingly, she also developed a very sensitive peanut allergy (the kind that can be fatal with just the smallest amount of peanut oil in the air nearby). It's gotten better, thankfully - the whole fabric issue was gone by the time she was about 2 years old, and her peanut allergy faded (though didn't disappear) in late adolescence/early adulthood.
    Interestingly, my high school biology teacher actually did her doctorate in immunology on allergic reactions. Apparently (now, this is admittedly from almost 30 years ago), our immune "memory" cells (the ones that identify harmful intruders into our systems) have long chains recording pretty much every substance we ingest/interact with. If those chains get cut somewhere, an allergy will develop - the degree of the allergy dependent on where the chain for that particular protein/substance is cut. As we age, they can get cut again, which is why allergies can change intensities or disappear. At least, that's how she explained it to us.
    My mother had a shellfish allergy for about 3-5 years; it gave her migraines and made her sick. But then it vanished as quickly as it had shown up.

  • @A_Typhlosion
    @A_Typhlosion Před 5 lety +1057

    The good old distorted MatPat picture, how you haunt me.

    • @zhianxu7992
      @zhianxu7992 Před 5 lety +27

      oof, The great has fallen, to the sad truth of passing 8 mil subs, and making crappy content.

    • @TheZenytram
      @TheZenytram Před 5 lety +36

      @@zhianxu7992 he is doing the same crap since the begining, and i like it

    • @zhianxu7992
      @zhianxu7992 Před 5 lety +2

      @@TheZenytram well...

    • @OkOk-tu3gc
      @OkOk-tu3gc Před 5 lety +13

      @@TheZenytram his ideas sound like the ones I get at 3am. Is that great content to you?

    • @beastcarleeto707
      @beastcarleeto707 Před 5 lety +8

      chun yan gong people can grow out of his videos
      I still like it tho xD

  • @DS-oopa
    @DS-oopa Před 5 lety +190

    "Is this like a bowl full of death to you?"
    "Well... Yes."
    😂😭

  • @lizzie0canada9roxya
    @lizzie0canada9roxya Před 2 lety +63

    I've been reading alot about "leaky gut syndrome" and how things like excessive growth of candida (due to antibiotics killing good bacteria in your body which normally keeps this under control) can cause your intestinal wall to weaken, allowing small food particles to escape into your body, which then your body starts attacking. Also plenty of other things can cause this "leaky gut syndrome". Perhaps this is a cause of this? Perhaps pestisides or overly processed foods can also attribute to this.

    • @pinerock9668
      @pinerock9668 Před 2 lety +1

      Leaky gut can cause food sensitivity and allergys as food particles that should be stopped leak into your body and your immune system attacks it. The new allergies increase your immune response and the problem grows and so does the list of foods you must avoid

    • @mikebradshaw8530
      @mikebradshaw8530 Před 2 lety +1

      Are we really asking this question? We as humans have essentially ruined the natural cycles and biochemistry in animals plants water air. Medications and synthetic chemicals along with greedy big pharma has all played a roll in causing a dominoe effect of disasters. You are naive and really need to study cause effect of our human history.

    • @callmeangie867
      @callmeangie867 Před 2 lety +9

      @@mikebradshaw8530 no need to be condescending.

    • @user-hv2cq9we1s
      @user-hv2cq9we1s Před 2 lety +5

      @@mikebradshaw8530 you strike me as a very prickish person coming to a comment section to leak your liquid excrement out of your mouth. Science doesn't value your opinion.

    • @CountingStars333
      @CountingStars333 Před 2 lety

      @@mikebradshaw8530 Bruh

  • @gabeshaw3721
    @gabeshaw3721 Před 2 lety +4

    I like how he says it’s a bowl of death instead of just calling it poison. Much stronger message

  • @utah133
    @utah133 Před 5 lety +392

    "Almond milk" is often made of lots of things besides almonds. It's been falsely marketed in some cases. It's a processed invented product. Might have soy, various plant gums, etc. added.

    • @someonerandom256
      @someonerandom256 Před 5 lety +49

      That's what I'm thinking. She could be allergic to carrageenan or quar gum or something like that .

    • @3nertia
      @3nertia Před 5 lety +10

      Yes, the ingredients in the almond milk need to be known and tested

    • @kyledailey
      @kyledailey Před 5 lety +10

      *Good point. I try to eat food as single items only, to have a better chance of knowing what I'm might be allergic too.*
      I had an allergic reaction to almonds, and they were made out of almonds.

    • @ShannaTrenholm
      @ShannaTrenholm Před 5 lety +4

      exactly. very little actual almond in almond milk--same with oat, cashew, all the milks unless you make them yourself (what I do to avoid all those gross gums and such).

    • @luisgentil
      @luisgentil Před 5 lety +8

      Almonds are expensive and it takes lots of them to make almond milk. So yeah they're most likely adding cheaper ingredientes. But to be fair almond milk allergy is no big deal, since it tastes f*kn horrible and shouldn't be drinked by anyone. I had to drink vegetable milk for 15 days as part of a surgery recovery diet and I tried some of them until settling for oat milk, which was the least terrible one.

  • @mikeoxlong8474
    @mikeoxlong8474 Před 4 lety +812

    Oh my god I finally get to flex on you
    I’m allergic to:
    Shellfish
    All nuts
    Coconuts
    Dairy
    Eggs
    Squid and octopi
    Passion fruit
    As my friend said: “God hates you.”
    Edit 1:
    This comment did gain some traction so i might as well add to it. I used to have allergies to fish and gluten when I was younger that I eventually grew out of. my current allergies are getting better although most still result in anaphylaxis. I do have non food allergies I.E. pollen, and animals such as Dogs cats [maybe hamsters?] (currently i own birds as pets). If you have any questions I will try and answer them in the comments below.

    • @randomfriends3698
      @randomfriends3698 Před 4 lety +59

      What do you eat?

    • @guruthemaster4516
      @guruthemaster4516 Před 4 lety +124

      @random friends *AIR*

    • @ronantheronin3521
      @ronantheronin3521 Před 4 lety +77

      Lucky I am allergic to the same things, but add dogs, cats and pollen. Include asthma and you got my life.

    • @mikeoxlong8474
      @mikeoxlong8474 Před 4 lety +26

      Ronan the Ronin yea i have the same things too I just only mentioned food allergies ps are you allergic to horses because I’m not

    • @ronantheronin3521
      @ronantheronin3521 Před 4 lety +20

      @@mikeoxlong8474 no thankfully I am not allergic to horses.

  • @BlueJayYT
    @BlueJayYT Před 2 lety +8

    Oh hey, you can see me in the background! Loved the collab

  • @windmediaco
    @windmediaco Před 2 lety

    Really enjoyed the Food Theory bit haha
    All of this was really interesting too!

  • @A.Filthy.Casual
    @A.Filthy.Casual Před 5 lety +241

    So I'm in the Air Force and when I was in tech school I started having really bad GI distress (aka diarrhea) after eating the yogurt or drinking the milk from the cafeteria in the morning. I thought I had just become lactose intolerant, so i started trying to live like that. One night i went out to a movie with my friends and we got ice cream (I wasnt thinking at the time) but I was fine. Long story short turns out the cafeteria just had some nasty-ass rancid dairy they were serving.

    • @LKRaider
      @LKRaider Před 5 lety +43

      Alathlind Cratoran I too am allergic to nasty and contaminated food

    • @origamiandcats6873
      @origamiandcats6873 Před 5 lety +21

      High quality ice cream doesn't have a lot of lactose. Cream doesn't have much lactose.

    • @erkdoc5
      @erkdoc5 Před 5 lety +4

      I thought I was becoming lactose intolerant too. Then after a while I was like why is my mouth burning.

    • @JosiahMcCarthy
      @JosiahMcCarthy Před 5 lety +4

      @@origamiandcats6873 neither does yogurt

    • @yourlilemogirl
      @yourlilemogirl Před 5 lety +1

      My fiancé isn’t lactose intolerant but if he eats or drinks milk proteins the skin in his mouth, nose, throat, stomach and intestines literally BURN. Like snorting a ghost pepper burn! Oddly enough tho if he boils or freezes them (think ice cream or boiling milk before using it in food) and it breaks the proteins down enough that they don’t hurt (as much). Maybe you have that?

  • @taichiwinchester1102
    @taichiwinchester1102 Před 3 lety +1134

    The term food allergy was one of my biggest culture shock when I moved to North America. It was unheard of back in my home country China. We have people allergic to certain antibiotics or intolerant to milk but that's nothing like food allergy.
    It's strange that food allergy affects American born Chinese but not Chinese grown up in China. Allergic asthma is also extremely rare in China but can be developed among people who migrate out of China over time. I guess allergy is purely caused environmental factors, it's not something passed down in the genes.

    • @arianitonline8748
      @arianitonline8748 Před 2 lety +194

      it has a lot to do with things the parents eat before and during the pregnancy. also after birth. food in murica has at least twice the amount of sugar and fat and other "toxins" in, and those are a big factor

    • @liyenong2017
      @liyenong2017 Před 2 lety +188

      Same, I'm a Malaysian and our national food nasi lemak contains peanuts and eggs, there is no way you can survive there when nobody ever mentioned peanut allergy. In Asia, there is rarely any food allergy just an intolerance to alcohol and milk.. maybe that's why we eat anything ahahhaha

    • @akakerness6396
      @akakerness6396 Před 2 lety +131

      Right? In Mexico for example, allergies are uncommon. I've never met anyone that was allergic to certain foods until I've moved to USA.

    • @aelius9907
      @aelius9907 Před 2 lety +40

      agreed in india allergies are rare

    • @arianitonline8748
      @arianitonline8748 Před 2 lety +100

      @@aelius9907 i think it's the processed food. They eat too much of it. And American junk food has double the junk of the same product in Europe. Twice the sugar, twice the fat, twice the amount and size! And they eat a lot of that junk!
      My father is allergic or intolerant to a specific sweet. He sometimes eat it because he loves it but all he gets is some skin itching and temperature and stomachache. But that's a rarely consumed food. But he isn't allergic to the ingredients of that sweet! He can eat them all day and nothing happens.

  • @austinthompson4795
    @austinthompson4795 Před 2 lety +4

    I had a peanut allergy since I was a kid however I started to notice reactions to grasses and got an allergy test only to learn that I was no longer allergic to peanuts.

  • @ArtByKarenEHaley
    @ArtByKarenEHaley Před 2 lety +2

    I used to never react to anything, but my daughter has been sensitive to dairy from the time she was a little baby. If I ate dairy, then nursed her, she got pinprick rashes on her body and she would cry all the time. She stopped having the issue when I stopped eating dairy, so for about a year I went off dairy. Then, when I had finished weaning her, I started to have serious, instant reactions to something in liquid coffee creamer, and in certain sugar free foods. The first time, i thought I had a stomach bug. Normally I drink my coffee with milk and at that time was using almond milk as a replacement.
    Well I was at a Ladies retreat, and I hadn't had regular coffee creamer in so long, so I decided to try it. I had a cup of decaf with some international brand liquid creamer, and about ten minutes later I was so sick I became dehydrated. It was awful. I had never reacted to creamer that way before, and didn't even consider that it had been the cause.
    I thought it was something I had eaten, since it was a group get together and there were lots of different potluck foods. Honestly, the cramps felt so horrible. It was just like food poisoning, or if you've had a baby, just like labor. It was gone within a few hours but it felt like all day, haha.
    When I had another cup of coffee with liquid creamer at my parents' house about a week later, I figured it out.
    The third time I was sick like that, a relative had given me a coffee from a local coffee shop chain. I drank a fair amount of it and then got sick again. Turns out it was sugar free (not something I usually eat), and for my mother in law, but our drinks had been swapped by mistake. Also was bad for her as she's a diabetic, and mine was a regular mocha. I think the artificial sweetener that's in liquid coffee creamer might be the culprit. I now react the same way to Arizona Arnold Palmer, which nowadays is only sold in "lite" where I live. It has artificial sweetener too
    Now I don't use coffee creamer unless it's the simple ingredients kind made with just real sugar and half and half. Usually I just take it with milk.
    I am definitely not a doctor or pathologist or whatever expert handles allergies, so this is all a guess. I suspect the hormonal change of stopping nursing, paired with beginning to drink and eat dairy products again, may have set my body off. I notice a lot of people here mentioning not being allergic to things until they reach puberty age or early adulthood, when our bodies are going through hormonal changes. While I was pregnant with her, I was stung by bees and reacted more strongly than usual. Normally I'd just get a little raised bump from a bee sting but both times I was stung on my hand and both times my forearm and fingers swelled up. I have been stung since then and react normally.
    Food reactions are weird man
    EDIT: I realize my issue is probably an intolerance not an allergy.

  • @dgvanz1155
    @dgvanz1155 Před 5 lety +793

    "The peanuts are emitting toxins as an evolutionary defense mechanism. They're tired of being eaten, and now they're fighting back." ..... "Yup".🚬 👓

    • @FirstLast-kp9jx
      @FirstLast-kp9jx Před 5 lety +43

      M. Night Shyamalan: Write that down, write that down.

    • @Long-wd4ee
      @Long-wd4ee Před 5 lety +12

      The immune system is planning an overthrow of the existing government system by ambushing at the emergence of the means of sustenance, which is then followed by direct assaults of the incumbent government

    • @tony_5156
      @tony_5156 Před 5 lety +14

      No, people with allergies are just kinda
      Inferior

    • @crazyman7504
      @crazyman7504 Před 5 lety +1

      David Gonzalez ...........no.......

    • @Aereto
      @Aereto Před 5 lety +1

      Many plant life does release something when it detects damage or performs another response.

  • @icewink7100
    @icewink7100 Před 5 lety +116

    I have a milk allergy and I can't count the amount of people who I've had to tell that it's different and a lot more severe than being lactose intolerant

    • @gregjones9479
      @gregjones9479 Před 5 lety +18

      Noah Inkrot Yeah I know the feeling, nobody I have ever met who has lactose intolerance is never serious about their lactose intolerance. They don’t seem to get that an allergy is much worse.

    • @teresaellis7062
      @teresaellis7062 Před 5 lety +11

      I completely understand. Most people who don't have allergies can't comprehend what is it like. I'm lactose intolerant and allergic. I would much rather just be lactose intolerant. I was allergic since I was little, but for a short period of time (from puberty to first pregnancy at 24) my allergy calmed down enough that I could eat milk. The only milk based food I miss is sharp cheddar. My allergy is back up to the range of annoying to scary depending upon the exposure.

    • @IngridBonde
      @IngridBonde Před 5 lety +14

      Milk allergy too, so frustrating and scary how people don’t understand it at all. I honestly think it’s the most misunderstood allergy. I constantly have people saying things like oh but this is margin you’ll be fine, when it has cream in it. Or people with absolutely no allergies trying to tell me how my allergy works, like BYE! I completely stopped eating at peoples house and only eat at vegan restaurants since no milk in the building. Hang in there!

    • @RhapsodicXStyle07
      @RhapsodicXStyle07 Před 5 lety +5

      Literally two very different things, one gives you mud butt the other can kill you

    • @faizyusuf2470
      @faizyusuf2470 Před 5 lety +2

      I had this joke in my mind:
      You're making me allergic to milk
      What does milk allergy mean?
      It means he's afraid of cashew
      No, it doesn't.
      HO HO HO Im gonna give you alot of cashew
      Stop it, Patrick. You're scaring him

  • @jaegerbombgaming6635
    @jaegerbombgaming6635 Před 2 lety +1

    Great video. Would have liked you to go more into talking about the different kinds of allergic reactions. I'm intolerant of mushrooms - I get severe flu symptoms. But I'm allergic to the nightshade family (tomato, potato, peppers) and I experience moderate inflammation, severe muscle tightness, skin boils and sharp joint pain....but no obvious swelling, etc so it went misdiagnosed and not correlated as an allergy for decades of my life. Ppl need to know all the possible kinds of allergic responses. It's not all hives and anaphylaxis.

  • @RudyTheNinja
    @RudyTheNinja Před 2 lety +3

    Whoa, what kind of creator did I just find??
    This guy is amazing!
    The production value is insane too!

  • @lowqualitydaftpunk8151
    @lowqualitydaftpunk8151 Před 5 lety +382

    i like the use of the patrick alarm at 4:17

  • @glee2460
    @glee2460 Před 5 lety +101

    In our grandparents' day (great grandparents' day if you're a millennial) some children were routinely dismissed as "sickly", and often no further explanation of their persistent poor health was sought―or wasn't available if it _was_ sought. It is now believed that many of these "sickly" children, whose siblings typically enjoyed healthy normality, were likely sufferers from one or other undiagnosed specific food allergy. A lot of them would "grow out of" their condition in mid to late childhood, but not all were so fortunate.

    • @ElasiaAvi
      @ElasiaAvi Před 4 lety +13

      You know millennials are going into their 30's right? I think you meant gen z

    • @professorrosenstock5026
      @professorrosenstock5026 Před 4 lety +1

      That makes a lot of sense.

    • @Meira750
      @Meira750 Před 4 lety +4

      Or a food intolerance, like beans and all legumes. I'm not "allergic" to peanuts but I can't tolerate anything in the legume family, not even green beans.

    • @alysssalyn
      @alysssalyn Před 4 lety +11

      In the Victorian times (into the late 1800s even) they used to mix borax into milk because it made the smell of spoiled milk go away but the bacteria of the milk going bad was making children very sick. Having diarrhea was deadly back then. Bread had alum in it to make it whiter. Adults could metabolize this stuff a bit better than a small child. They grew out of it because the food industry slowly put a stop to adultering food.

    • @annalisette5897
      @annalisette5897 Před 4 lety +7

      I will disagree with your dating system about great-grandparents.... Back to the 60's and 70's these deadly food allergies were rare. Peanut butter sandwiches, cookies and candy was served in school caffeterias. I am of that generation -- am no one's great-grandmother -- and deadly food allergies were known but extremely rare. We did not have worms, most of us had clean homes and indoor plumbing. We did play outside and get dirty. Maybe an interesting search would be to see a geographical distribution of deadly food allergies. Might kids growing up outdoors in rural areas have fewer deadly allergies than city kids?

  • @idatethefatkid
    @idatethefatkid Před 2 lety +2

    I've been allergic to peanuts, tree nuts, and bananas since I was a year old. Things like checking ingredients and asking waitstaff is so normal that I barely think about it. The rise in food allergies in the past decade or so has actually been helpful for me. Restaurants, etc are way better about labeling and taking precautions than they were when I was a kid in the 90s. I still have to deal with customer service people getting pissy at me for inconveniencing them though :/

  • @Annbakermodel
    @Annbakermodel Před 2 lety

    Fantastic! Can you take this a step further and make a video in MCAS & Mastocytosis? People need to know about these life changing diseases.

  • @rune5951
    @rune5951 Před 4 lety +254

    4:18 you can hear Patrick ever so slightly say-
    WeE woO wEe WoO wEE wOo

  • @madelineloyd7905
    @madelineloyd7905 Před 5 lety +205

    No copyright here
    We only use Gif Peanut Butter

  • @iainburgess8577
    @iainburgess8577 Před 2 lety

    That reaction re answers is common to every chronic condition where how, what, why are all answered "we don't know".
    I don't have food allergies, but several aspects of this episode reminded my of my chronic condition.
    The limits to life choices & stress of the unknown especially.

  • @aaronstark1969
    @aaronstark1969 Před 2 lety

    Wow this made me grateful, I’ve had a tree nut allergy my whole life but I just throw up if I eat them and produce form this sounds so much worse

  • @pratofundo
    @pratofundo Před 5 lety +390

    The editor went nuts in the editing hahahah Nice job, hahahahaha

    • @andrikh4982
      @andrikh4982 Před 5 lety +10

      Reminds me of Pewdipie's editors (Brad 1 and 2) style of editing.

    • @ezekiel0606
      @ezekiel0606 Před 5 lety +6

      I love it. best edit yet

    • @StreamHGF
      @StreamHGF Před 5 lety

      @@andrikh4982 U mean Brad 1 and Sive 1

  • @Insorainity
    @Insorainity Před 3 lety +484

    "THAT'S JUST A THEORY-"
    Matpat in the background: *don't you dare steal my catch phrase I will not hesitate to do a theory on you-*

  • @kilroy987
    @kilroy987 Před 2 lety +1

    I developed an allergy to mustard, which I discovered by asking for honey mustard to be added to a sandwich at the deli. I hadn't had mustard for many years. I treated the symptoms with Benadryl - I got a nasty migrating full body skin rash. After it was finally gone after a couple days, my body then started to have a reaction to Benadryl - but not while the Benadryl is in my system, only after it wears off.

  • @hoog7365
    @hoog7365 Před 2 lety +3

    As a kid with what has always been described to me as a "severe allergy" to peanuts and tree nuts, I've just developed the habit of checking labels. But it really sucks when you can't go into some shops, like pastry shops (especially in France) when they all say that they "can't guarantee" stuff, or when you go to some party and just say "no" to every food, unsure if they have any nuts or have been in close contact with nuts. (side rant- going to Europe was quite scary. we had a translation card, but it was always worrying when they didn't fully understand what it meant, especially if it 'may contain' nuts. luckily I was fine though) As an introvert, it sucks to have to say that I have a "severe peanut and tree nut allergy" to every restaurant, coffee shop, or whatever other food place you go to. I also just recently learned that my parents used to get Thai food all the time, but bc of me they haven't had it in 16 years. Overall, in many ways, it sucks.

  • @aryanbanerjee7579
    @aryanbanerjee7579 Před 5 lety +100

    I'm deathly allergic to eggs and yeah, I really have developed trust issues with the food industry and I really don't trust people to give me food that is not contaminated. To this day I only trust my father with food (not even mum) and I don't think trust issues are going anywhere soon. I think the psychological impact of allergies on your diet is often overlooked, and I think that allergy management systems should also include psychological training to be sceptical of food just the optimal amount so that you are not extremely paranoid about enjoying food in a safe environment. :)

    • @realprotonn
      @realprotonn Před 4 lety +1

      This is spam

    • @williamnjagi3291
      @williamnjagi3291 Před 4 lety

      do you ever say I'm vegan to avoid eggs or is that not an option?

    • @allybaby1248
      @allybaby1248 Před 4 lety +2

      william njagi the problem with doing that is it’s not a preference. Lol it’s literally life or death.

    • @jasmirris
      @jasmirris Před 2 lety

      @@williamnjagi3291 it doesn't help when the commercial kitchen or factory you're getting it from isn't following the allergy safety protocol you need. Also some people might not take someone seriously or be on a roll in the kitchen and forget to do the clean and change process. In addition, menu/recipe options as well as grocery items are slowly growing but when you find options that won't kill you you seriously want to throw a party. You don't know how many times I've gotten sick because of the last two and was out of commission a couple days. It happened a couple days ago to me and I'm still getting over it.
      There are several other reasons but I'm sure someone else has said it elsewhere.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Před 5 lety +287

    People who are allergic to peanuts also suffer from extreme jealousy of those who aren't. It's a condition called peanuts envy.....

    • @zoie4000
      @zoie4000 Před 4 lety +13

      I am allergic. I hate peanuts. They are overrated

    • @acekaeyasmom2704
      @acekaeyasmom2704 Před 4 lety +14

      For someone who's allergic to crabs, as much as possible, I don't want to see people eating crabs cause it makes me envy them. 😅

    • @woko1009
      @woko1009 Před 4 lety +3

      They sound crunchy and probably dry so I don't really care much about peanut butter

    • @professorrosenstock5026
      @professorrosenstock5026 Před 4 lety

      @@nuggetthehamster7072 Same, they are so gross. I'm not allergic.

    • @JuanIII
      @JuanIII Před 4 lety

      Or, y'know the food has parasites in them and are not as sterile as we think.

  • @matthewwriter9539
    @matthewwriter9539 Před 2 lety +4

    7:00 MatPat will be pleased.

  • @thenoxbox3871
    @thenoxbox3871 Před 2 lety +7

    I’ve had a lot of trouble with my stomach since I was a child (about 15 years of digestive trouble) and I’ve taken tests and had endoscopy’s of my stomach twice where tissue samples were taken and it all came back normal. I had diarrhea every day of my life for 15 years 8 of which I spent constantly severely nauseous and nothing helped. Then my dr said he wanted to do a liver biopsy b/c he thinks I have fatty liver and I know what that entails and I was like no not happening. So he said that I should lose some weight (I’m about 40lbs overweight) and come back for lab work in a year which is what I did. And I kid you not once I stared my diet all of my problems went away and I lost some weight. The diet I went on wasn’t some fad diet or anything. All I did was cut out pre packaged food. Everything that came in a wrapper that wasn’t 5 ingredients or less on the nutrient info got left at the store. It seriously helped, now I’ve also found out through trial and error that some foods irritate my stomach. Olives/olive oil (ate olives a ton as a kid), sugar substitutes (erythritol, stevia extract, monk fruit; omg my digestive system hates them), gluten, and dairy. I don’t have any food allergies or celiac’s disease. Hope this helps someone.

    • @jampsonn1826
      @jampsonn1826 Před 2 lety +2

      Wow erythritol wrecks my stomach too! That and monk fruit extract seem to be in every sugar free or low sugar drink these days, it sucks so much.

    • @thenoxbox3871
      @thenoxbox3871 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jampsonn1826 I know they are in a lot of foods now days. They are viewed as healthier than sugar by some. Personally my stomach doesn’t have any bad reaction to regular sugar (I get the organic cane sugar from Costco) and I don’t think that there is anything wrong or bad about regular sugar so long as you don’t eat to much of it on a regular basis.

    • @RocketJo86
      @RocketJo86 Před 2 lety +1

      I have the same problem witg sugar substitutes. I get so sick from them, especially erythritol and aspartam. I'm right now in SouthAfrica and for some reason (I guess trying to put up a "healthy facade") they sell soda bottles (1,5 litre) here that have sugar and substitutes in them (while carrying the same label as normal sugery stuff - while like Coke Zero has a diffrent colored lable. I didn't know that and drank a glass of that stuff and got so sick and tired from it. Especially Asparame is said to be dangerous for your health in bigger doses.

    • @thenoxbox3871
      @thenoxbox3871 Před 2 lety +1

      @@RocketJo86 I know what you mean with aspartame, OMG I can taste it instantly, makes me feel horrible.

  • @uzuhany7412
    @uzuhany7412 Před 4 lety +237

    In 22 years of my life, I've never got a food allergies. I ate everything I wanted to
    I hope I'll never have food allergies. I love foods so much, it suck when I cant eat something bcs allergies.
    I'll edit it if I got some troubles.

    • @mackal1sc1ous
      @mackal1sc1ous Před 3 lety

      Mine didn’t occur till I was 23👀

    • @uzuhany7412
      @uzuhany7412 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mackal1sc1ous is it food allergy? Have you eat the food before you got your allergy?

    • @Sasha-xt3jh
      @Sasha-xt3jh Před 3 lety

      I became allergic to shellfish at 19 :c

    • @mackal1sc1ous
      @mackal1sc1ous Před 3 lety +7

      @@uzuhany7412 LMAO YES food allergy. I was sent to the hospital and I have to carry an epipen now. I am allergic to fresh fruits and most nuts. I ate very healthy as a child. And now I cant even eat jelly with strawberry pieces. As a kid the only thing that happened was melons made me throw up that started maybe high school. Then once I turned 23 slowly it became all fruits. like no joke... severe reactions. Just recently I was at work and ate fresh broccoli, I left work to go to the nearest drug store to get benedryl. I left my keys in the ignition and left my car running. I was not thinking clearly and I didn't have my epipen. So,slowly its now becoming fresh vegetables including carrots, cilantro, onions, and garlic. IDK I doubt that would happen to you. But out of nowhere I became allergic to darn near everything!!! I have 10 brothers and sisters and I am the only 1 with this issue.

    • @martinaannikaelayda5490
      @martinaannikaelayda5490 Před 3 lety +1

      Damn you’re lucky, i cant eat 8 types of food and 2 of those are fish n chicken

  • @Fair_Gravity
    @Fair_Gravity Před 5 lety +261

    I'm gonna go out and eat some dirt now. Thanks Doctor (But not that kinda doctor) Joe!

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Před 5 lety +49

      Happy to help. Where do I send my bill?

    • @JohnDoe-zw8vx
      @JohnDoe-zw8vx Před 5 lety +2

      Haha! I ate dirt as a kid, I'd drop food on the ground and just brush it off (God made dirt and dirt don't hurt) and my mom would defrost meats in manners not recommended by the FDA and no food allergies for me!

    • @campkira
      @campkira Před 4 lety

      @@JohnDoe-zw8vx your body still had to protect you... dirt is not equal to health...
      Allergy is not the same as poison... it the why body react to certain type of thing... It more a a DNA's memory... it know this thing is relative to this thing that will kill you so it react....

    • @erinaa9486
      @erinaa9486 Před 4 lety +3

      I let my baby eat dirt after watching a TED talk that recommended it to prevent allergies. (Also an excuse not too clean! Save my baby's life! 😏)

    • @tomrhodes1629
      @tomrhodes1629 Před 2 lety

      Eating dirt is actually extremely beneficial, as it provides bacteria and enzymes that benefit digestion. It's what you're eating from the grocery store that causes the problems!
      "Why are so many people allergic to food?" DO YOU REALLY WANT TO KNOW? Most food allergies are caused by a condition known as hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). And the reason why food allergies are ever-more prevalent is because the CAUSE of hypoglycemia is ever-more prevalent: REFINED CARBOHYDRATE CONSUMPTION. "Big Money" ensures that this information stays buried, because both the food industry and medical industry make a FORTUNE off of this crap.
      Want to know more?
      "It's Okay To Be Smart." But intelligence without wisdom is like a boat without water; it won't take you very far. On the other hand, wisdom can take you VERY far! From the cure for cancer (and colds and flus and Covid) to the very Meaning of Life, I have it. "Click" and ye shall find!

  • @JohnnyCapilla
    @JohnnyCapilla Před 2 lety +1

    At 4:17 the Patrick "wee woo wee woo" was a good touch 😂

  • @JATJAT330
    @JATJAT330 Před rokem +2

    I have no known allergies, but once woke up with a swollen face and intense body itching. Dermatology couldn't track down the cause and I've never had it since. I put it down to coming into contact with a nasty and my body did its thing to protect me. But that one experience has made me realise how terrifying having life threatening allergies must be

  • @tanhouzer
    @tanhouzer Před 3 lety +194

    Will Smith, irobot movie:
    "sorry, i'm allergic to Bull*hit"
    Doctor: "let me introduce it to you in small amounts everyday"😂

  • @furqanbaba5274
    @furqanbaba5274 Před 5 lety +370

    Saying "theory" when you mean "hypothesis"😟😬 you yourself taught me that Joe!

    • @ai.raiondesu
      @ai.raiondesu Před 5 lety +13

      r/wooosh

    • @victherocker
      @victherocker Před 5 lety +9

      a theory and a hypothesis are different

    • @furqanbaba5274
      @furqanbaba5274 Před 5 lety +11

      @@victherocker he said theory as if he meant hypothesis

    • @jennacook2505
      @jennacook2505 Před 5 lety

      +

    • @hamengkuageng1789
      @hamengkuageng1789 Před 5 lety +4

      it's just a theory when there is no possibility to prove it and it's a hypothesis when there is a chance to prove it. that's the different

  • @mintgreen5869
    @mintgreen5869 Před rokem +1

    I actually grew out of my peanut allergy. I accidentally ate a mini snickers bar and then was super confused when I wasn't breaking out on hives. Still very allergic to cashews and pistachios but only some kinds of mango. I could also do without my raw vegetable allergy but it's pretty easy to identify when a plant is raw and it's way too mild to do anything but annoy me so I don't think of it too much.

  • @Digiflower5
    @Digiflower5 Před 6 měsíci

    This is very informative, I like to mention while an intolerance cannot kill you it can make feel terrible both physically and mentally, it depends on the person.

  • @EllaRickie
    @EllaRickie Před 5 lety +249

    Bold of you to assume I don't want to have my throat swell during dinner.

    • @Annelief_
      @Annelief_ Před 5 lety +2

      ?

    • @Long-wd4ee
      @Long-wd4ee Před 5 lety +4

      So you like the choking sensations from your expanding throat wall? Never know anyone who'd be into that sort of thing

    • @sdfkjgh
      @sdfkjgh Před 5 lety +11

      Minh Long: That's some people's fetish. Haven't you heard the phrase "Choke me, daddy!" before?

    • @Long-wd4ee
      @Long-wd4ee Před 5 lety +3

      @@sdfkjgh yes, daddy being another person, not your throat. i'd say this person has some type of sexual gratification from allergic reactions of the body, which can simulate the act of a strong daddy dominating his sexual partner with excessive kink.
      i.e., yeah I get it.

    • @SloaneGrey
      @SloaneGrey Před 5 lety +6

      Minh Long really? I’d assume they were being pretty blatantly sarcastic.

  • @scheimong
    @scheimong Před 5 lety +67

    I remember 4 years ago when I was still in high school, there was this very ordinary Friday morning, when I started getting itchy "mosquito bites" on my arm in class. Mosquitos do tend to have a particular affinity towards me and I get bitten very often so I wasn't that surprised or concerned. But then those "bites" started appearing on my other arm, legs, chest, groin, back and my face.
    I never had any allergies before in my life so I didn't know they were actually hives, instead I thought it must be some tiny mysterious bug that's biting me all over. It eventually got so bad I had to go to the school clinic, who immediately had a teacher accompany me to a nearby hospital to get allergy suppression drugs. The symptoms all cleared quickly after I took the drugs, and I was fine that afternoon.
    4 years later I'm attending university 8000km from home and still haven't figured out what was the cause of that allergic reaction, nor has anything similar reappeared afterwards. I've read recently that more than half of allergy cases were in fact not traceable back to a specific source, so that kind of reassures me a bit.

    • @sion8
      @sion8 Před 5 lety +5

      I had a similar experience at home in my early teens, now an adult I have no idea what happened but I haven't really thought about it and this video made it even worse since it can happen to anyone at any age.

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute Před 5 lety +1

      This happens to me a couple of times a year. The problem is that I have so many severe environmental and food allergies that even if I don't *think* I've come in contact with anything unusual that I might be reacting to, it could be a reaction to virtually anything else I've come in contact with that wouldn't even cross my mind. Meanwhile I'm seeing an allergist regularly and undergoing long-term immunotherapy to attempt to make everything I've tested positive for a little bit less potentially fatal, and still having these mystery reactions. I've come to the conclusion that sometimes, immune systems are just sadistic bastards.

    • @joselastname448
      @joselastname448 Před 5 lety +4

      It took me 3 years to realize that heat was causing me to get hives but only during the dry winter season

    • @crab1227
      @crab1227 Před 5 lety +1

      This has happened to me a lot

    • @abhieshreedhami6568
      @abhieshreedhami6568 Před 5 lety +1

      Hives are actually very common. I get them in cold weather. I also get them when I put my body through extreme workout after a very long time and produce too much heat for my body to handle. I also get pressure induced hives. Also, I am allergic to shellfish and have asthma.
      All of this sounds too much but I enjoy a normal life 😅

  • @RocketJo86
    @RocketJo86 Před 2 lety

    I started developing an allergy to walnuts shortly after my great-grandpa died. He had a walnut tree in his garden and we used to eat fresh walnuts together in the fall and winter. Sine his death (I was about seven at that time), I have been allergic to walnuts in the first place, as well as to unroasted/ uncooked hazelnuts and almonds (once they have been thouroughly heated it's fine) and I have a cross reaction to some types of apples as well. Interestingly I have absolutly no reaction on pecans and macadamias, both of which I encountered a lot later in my life as an older teenager/ young adult. If someone would ask me where my allergy came from, I would say it's mostly of psychological origin, as it's so perfectly tied to my great-grandpas death (we were close). And it cemented the bodily reaction over some years, developing a full fledged allergy. It would even explain, why I react to walnuts pretty heavily, while I don't show any reaction to very closely related pecans and raw hazelnuts just give me mild inconvinience. And a friend, who's a MTA once told me that an alelrgy can develop suddenly, but it normally doesn't get worse over time. So my walnut allergy should not be able to kill me one day, because I never experienced an anaphylactic shock by now. I'm not sure if I trust his expertise, thou. Just stay away from walnuts. Luckily, I don't like the taste anymore, too. So I'm not even tempted to try.
    Interestingly, my friend seemed to had developed an allergy to eucalyptus or menthol, when she was trying to ease her caughing caused by covid with euca-drops.

  • @someonenamedben2837
    @someonenamedben2837 Před 2 lety +1

    I am also a burden to food allergies, I’m allergic to peanuts and tree nuts but I’m anaphylactic to sesame. Sesame was always a weird one since it’s in almost all breads so I can’t eat those.

  • @angel-tb2tk
    @angel-tb2tk Před 4 lety +215

    me: i have an allergy
    theory: no ur immune system is just being dramatic coz it’s bored
    oh ok ill go snort some pollen 🥴

    • @_._star_wanderer_._
      @_._star_wanderer_._ Před 2 lety

      If its pollen you're allergic to, sometimes eating local honey can help

    • @allegocraftandandgems
      @allegocraftandandgems Před 2 lety

      I am lactose intolerance and I love milk soo

    • @birdgirl8390
      @birdgirl8390 Před 2 lety +1

      I grew up on a farm, played in the mud... like... literally... that one mud puddle in my parents garden was heavenly and smearing that mud all over myself was so therapeutic 🤣 we had all kinds of animals and I'm still allergic to life itself. I'm not sure if that theory is right.

  • @gabeangel8104
    @gabeangel8104 Před 3 lety +223

    I just want to mention that for some people their allergies are severe enough that sitting next to a bowl of what they are allergic to or contact with someone who recently ate or handled the thing could be enough to be dangerous. Obviously he had checked it wasn’t going to cause harm in this particular situation but to everyone else, not only please don’t trick people into eating something they are allergic to but also don’t bring the thing into their presence at all unless you have checked how extreme their allergy is.
    I have heard of people who have got sick or even died because they were kissed by someone who had eaten something they are allergic to! How scary must it be being that allergic! I’m so thankful that my allergies are not that severe!

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute Před 2 lety +24

      Thanks for this message! If there's anything more horrifying than waking up on a plane while going into anaphylaxis because the people around you had been eating peanuts, I'm not sure what it is. All I know is that there was a very kind nurse on board who helped me with my Epipen, Benedryl, and got me strapped to an oxygen tank so I could breathe for the rest of the flight, instead of choking to death on my own throat from the amount of recirculated peanut oil on the air. On another occasion, my niece, (who has many of the same allergies as I do, but is much smaller), briefly stopped breathing because she had sat in a chair where the previous occupant had been eating peanuts. Her parents saved her with fast Epipen action, but it was way too close a call!
      Never underestimate how bad someone's allergies might be. That lack of concern could cost their life.

    • @chimco
      @chimco Před 2 lety +11

      My former classmate couldn't even be in the same room with nuts or she'd have a bad reaction. It happened one time because another classmate opened a pack of nuts without thinking.

    • @morbidmacaroni
      @morbidmacaroni Před 2 lety +7

      Yep. My mum just went into anaphylaxis today from getting Nutella on her skin.

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute Před 2 lety +4

      @@morbidmacaroni Yikes! I hope your mum's okay, and that it doesn't happen again!
      (How weird is it that I can actually eat Nutella, among all my other awful food allergies? :| )

    • @franklinz8098
      @franklinz8098 Před 2 lety +5

      Imagine kissing a loved one and killing them. Terrible.

  • @SunnyTheOpossum
    @SunnyTheOpossum Před 2 lety

    I had a teacher back when I was in elementary school who was severely allergic to milk to the point where just touching it would cause her to break out into hives. I didn’t see it myself, but apparently some random kid threw his open milk carton at her at lunch, and she had to go to the hospital.

  • @hentaioverwhelming
    @hentaioverwhelming Před 2 lety +1

    I had a pretty bad case of walnut pollen allergy that forced me to take an Allegra pill a day back when it was still a prescription. It was kind of inconvenient to be going to my university lectures and sneezing through the duration of the lecture due to my walnut pollen allergy. I then spent 2 years in Hong Kong and when I came back, my walnut pollen allergy was gone.

  • @canyadigit6274
    @canyadigit6274 Před 5 lety +168

    “This is a Leading Theory, Just a Theory”
    6:18
    I feel like you’ve betrayed me.

    • @brandonkelley6500
      @brandonkelley6500 Před 5 lety +15

      Im glad I am not the only person who caught this. This is a huge slip up from a science-minded channel, because there is a huge disconnect between the science and layperson definition of "theory" ... I don't know why he wouldn't have said hypothosis?

    • @canyadigit6274
      @canyadigit6274 Před 5 lety +12

      Brandon Kelley dude he was joking when he said that. He was making an allusion to the “Game Theory” youtube channel.

    • @steve00alt70
      @steve00alt70 Před 5 lety +3

      he was close to getting sued lol

    • @Xbs_Rebass
      @Xbs_Rebass Před 5 lety +1

      And thats just a theory a GAME THEORY (Earrape)

    • @RainAngel111
      @RainAngel111 Před 5 lety

      He really should've said "hypothesis" but I guess that implies that it hasn't been tested yet which isn't true

  • @user-ip3mm6pr7o
    @user-ip3mm6pr7o Před 5 lety +143

    "just a theory" wow, I didn't expect that.
    *with game theory music repeat the just a theory line* me "somehow, I did expect that though."

  • @StudioMod
    @StudioMod Před 2 lety

    I have lots of intolerance and have recently developed allergies to antibiotics like Bactrim that never affected me till my mid 20s. It’s rough. I have chronic reactive nerve pain/joint inflammation and never ending trips to the bathroom as it made my IBS completely unmanageable.

  • @alexmiller4755
    @alexmiller4755 Před 2 lety +5

    2 years ago, I went to Thailand for the first time. The first few days I was completely fine with the food, in fact I love the cuisine and eat alot during the trip. But then one day after I had a shrimp fried rice, just some hours later, my skin started to itch and my face got swollen. So the first time ever in my life I had an allergy, it was in a foreign land. Luckily, my friend popped me an allergy pill then I got over the night peacefully. The funny thing is, I had no idea what I had the allergic reaction to, til this day.

    • @janegitau7587
      @janegitau7587 Před 2 lety

      I think the allergic reaction was to shrimp

  • @eunac3037
    @eunac3037 Před 4 lety +406

    If I grow allergic to mangoes, I'm going to freak out and be really sad-

  • @SaBoTeUr2001
    @SaBoTeUr2001 Před 5 lety +30

    To think that all the mud pies I made as a kid has spared me all these allergies....
    On the other hand, I did catch worms, which wasn't fun, but was easily cured.

    • @stabbypandarogue8164
      @stabbypandarogue8164 Před 4 lety +2

      I rather have worms than being unable to eat eggs, milk, cheese, nuts, etc. Worms can be cured, allergies not so much

  • @UnholyGTX
    @UnholyGTX Před 2 lety +2

    Growing up I would eat a lot of butter pecan ice cream and I always noticed that it made my mouth and throat feel weird. I thought it was normal so I continued to eat it. One day while I was working at my local DQ I had a turtle sundae on break and immediately my mouth and throat went to feeling raw and scratchy. I brought it up to one of my coworkers and they immediately grabbed the sundae and tossed in in the garbage screaming at me that I was clearly having an allergic reaction. Went to a doctor a week later and sure enough I'm allergic to pecans specifically. No other tree nuts cause a reaction.

  • @vaughnspight681
    @vaughnspight681 Před 2 lety

    Wow I've always wanted to see this

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday Před 5 lety +515

    If George Washington Carver was alive today he'd study peanut allergies..... And probably cure them.

    • @besmart
      @besmart  Před 5 lety +110

      The original nutty professor

    • @danielthesantos
      @danielthesantos Před 5 lety +41

      I strongly disagree! He would be too busy trying to figure out how to get out of that box in the ground.

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 Před 5 lety +13

      He's the guy who carved up George Washington

    • @KFrost-fx7dt
      @KFrost-fx7dt Před 5 lety +6

      I don't think he was a doctor. He would probably be on the team trying to figure out how to genetically engineer peanuts to be hypoallergenic though. Damn...now I'm craving boiled peanuts!

    • @isaacezekielthecolorblindg7343
      @isaacezekielthecolorblindg7343 Před 5 lety +3

      SmarterEveryDay he’s the black guy that made peanut butter and like 10000 different things to do with peanuts

  • @thecrippledpancake9455
    @thecrippledpancake9455 Před 3 lety +79

    Peanut: I’m gonna end this man’s whole career.
    Human:Self destructing in 5, 4, 3, 2, 1........💥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥.

  • @hanakowolf578
    @hanakowolf578 Před 2 lety +2

    Personally, I STRONGLY agree with the parasite theory. Might I suggest another theory? Maybe it's a chemical or pesticide that was used while producing certain food products? Or it could even be a chemical compound, like potassium.
    I recently found out that I'm allergic to loads of nuts (except peanut and cashew, which I find odd), certain fruits such as coconut and cantaloupe, vegetables, and shellfish.
    It's just a possibility.

  • @wendywoo7031
    @wendywoo7031 Před 2 lety

    I have several allergies, wheat protein, gluten, moulds/yeast, some medications, but also almonds and chickpeas are ropey for me. Recently tried pistachios with great success, so tried cashews but that did not go well! So I've halted my tests with nuts for the moment.

  • @williamjones7163
    @williamjones7163 Před 2 lety +77

    For my entire life, I have been allergic to all tree nuts to some degree. Growing up as a kid if I ate some nut by mistake it would make me a bit nauseous and maybe some hives. As a high school student I was on a trip and had baklava for the first time. I became a bit nauseous but my face started to swell. I went to the emergency room. I was treated with Benadryl in one arm and adrenaline in the other. One side was ready to pass out and the other side was ready to dance all night. The sleepy side won. The next morning I was fine. Fast forward to a few years ago after a heart attack and the heart medicine Lysinopril. I ate a quarter of a cookie that was oatmeal, cranberry, and walnut. For some reason I missed the word walnut on the label. I knew in about 20 seconds that there was a problem. I went and got some Benadryl. Normally that would have been all I need to do. But because I was on Lysinopril my reaction went off the rails. My face started to swell and a coworker called 911. I remember the EMTs bringing the gurney in to the store. I remember getting on the gurney. I remember waking up in ICU with a tracheotomy in my throat and a feeding tube up my nose about 2 weeks later. I was in the hospital for a month because of one quarter of a cookie.

  • @SickLid242
    @SickLid242 Před 5 lety +118

    It's just a hypothesis! Maybe it will be a theory someday

    • @ai.raiondesu
      @ai.raiondesu Před 5 lety +11

      It's just a joke! Maybe you and other 43 people will get it someday...

    • @JogaLee
      @JogaLee Před 5 lety +3

      Search for MatPat. Might help.

    • @bingbonghafu
      @bingbonghafu Před 5 lety +3

      Felipe Lins No search for Game Theory and Film Theory

    • @farlesbarkley1022
      @farlesbarkley1022 Před 5 lety

      I was going to say...he was making a big deal about stressing it's "just a theory" but I recall an episode, and I think it was Joe, talking about how strong a Theory is. You know, like gravity

    • @tomrhodes1629
      @tomrhodes1629 Před 2 lety

      Well, here's the truth; not just a hypothesis or theory: Most food allergies are caused by a condition known as hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). And the reason why food allergies are ever-more prevalent is because the CAUSE of hypoglycemia is ever-more prevalent: REFINED CARBOHYDRATE CONSUMPTION. "Big Money" ensures that this information stays buried, because both the food industry and medical industry make a FORTUNE off of this crap.
      Want to know more?
      "It's Okay To Be Smart." But intelligence without wisdom is like a boat without water; it won't take you very far. On the other hand, wisdom can take you VERY far! From the cure for cancer (and colds and flus and Covid) to the very Meaning of Life, I have it. "Click" and ye shall find!

  • @TheSpriteStory
    @TheSpriteStory Před 2 lety

    Loving all of the tasteful nods and references

  • @straymutt2504
    @straymutt2504 Před 2 lety +1

    I have a really bad citrus allergy. If someone opens a citrus in a room I'm my body just shuts down. My throat will start to swell and close up. Doctors are very confuse why this is and even rare for an allergy to be airborne. I have to keep an epi pen on me at all times.
    It sucks because as a child I used to eat them all the time but now I can't even get close to one.

  • @AM-kx2mn
    @AM-kx2mn Před 3 lety +16

    My kid is allergic to Tree Nuts and that’s definitely a full time job! It’s so hard to teach them not to accept food from any kid, not even friends or family. And also teaching everyone around him!

  • @andreaschavez7961
    @andreaschavez7961 Před 2 lety +59

    4:19, with the sirens. You can here Patrick (from spongebob) go “wee woo” multiple times. That’s some next level sound editing lmao

  • @adriengriffon
    @adriengriffon Před 2 lety

    I broke out into hives one time for no reason, too. Eventually, I figured out it was something I was touching, which led me to my truck (I'm a truck driver). It was winter in Minnesota. There was salt everywhere. While I'm not allergic to sodium chloride, either magnesium chloride or calcium chloride (used in colder climates because regular table salt doesn't help that much when it's -15°F out) make me break out in hives. So I ended up having to have my truck thoroughly washed.

  • @jackback70
    @jackback70 Před 2 lety

    Does anybody have experienced something similar?
    Since I am a little kid I had this wierd allergy which reacts on most nuts like, walnut, cashew, peanut, almond... and on most fruits like apple, pear, mango, pinapple... but the catch is that I don't get an allergic reaction all the time and even if I do its mild just a very unpleasant burning, almost swallowing-like sensation in my mouth and sometimes a bit of stomach ache while other times I dont feel anything at all.

  • @TokyoTraveller
    @TokyoTraveller Před 5 lety +129

    she could also be allergic to:
    pesticide(s)
    bits of insect that get into almost everything, and certain amounts are allowed in our processed foods

    • @Starry_Night_Sky7455
      @Starry_Night_Sky7455 Před 5 lety +7

      *This* is plausibly true in her case. Just knowing that some people have bad reactions to pesticides directly put on food, or as you suggest in a foreign substance that gets into the food can make someone develop food anxiety.
      I know two people with allergies to specific pesticides. They learned of their allergy the hard way, by consuming fruit sprayed with pesticide which resulted in an allergy. I don't remember the details, but yes, what you're saying is true.

    • @blackwing97
      @blackwing97 Před 5 lety +5

      There's also no way to know what other kind of food the milk could've been contaminated with from the facility where it was made/packaged.

    • @lesleydehaan5898
      @lesleydehaan5898 Před 5 lety +14

      I live the allergy life of alliums - mainly onions and garlic. It sucks ‘cause it’s not one of the main allergies. If someone says, “I have a deadly allergy to peanuts”, people injure themselves removing them from the world. If I say, “I have a deadly allergy to onions,” people are like, “Mmm hmm... good luck not dying.”

    • @HyperionaSilverleaf
      @HyperionaSilverleaf Před 5 lety +1

      Or one of the other ingredients.

    • @buddyclem7328
      @buddyclem7328 Před 5 lety +3

      @@Starry_Night_Sky7455 I can confirm this, because I spent a night in the hospital over my allergy to boric acid, a pesticide used to kill roaches. I had to endure the decontamination showers, which felt like standing under a dump truck dumping gravel on my naked body, while 2 men in protective clothing and gas masks hosed me down. Even my car had to be decontaminated by my wife. They tried to throw away my clothes including my wallet and keys! I don't recommend the experience.

  • @SunraeSkatimunggr
    @SunraeSkatimunggr Před 5 lety +39

    I had a similar "mystery" allergic reaction to an apple one time. I suspect something on the apple, because it has never happened again.

    • @howtowithelizabeth7513
      @howtowithelizabeth7513 Před 4 lety +5

      Sunrae McDonald probably pesticides

    • @VioletRaya
      @VioletRaya Před 4 lety +1

      Pesticide definitely

    • @rhysh4625
      @rhysh4625 Před 4 lety +3

      I am allergic to apples and some people still don't believe it after having this allergy for 3 years. I also am allergic to other things.

    • @meowono7218
      @meowono7218 Před 4 lety +2

      It happens to me everytime i eat an apple, without fail. My mouth swells and has a tingly sense

    • @williamroberts5716
      @williamroberts5716 Před 4 lety +3

      I'm only allergic to Fuji apples. The skin has microscopic hairs that cause a reaction. Other apples are okay.

  • @Sgtoreos
    @Sgtoreos Před 2 lety

    Similar story happened to me. One instance of eating kale I had an allergic reaction but testing didn't say I was allergic but the reaction was my throat starting to close up.

  • @UnicornBuffalo
    @UnicornBuffalo Před 2 lety +1

    Growing up I was allergic to peaches. It was never a super bad reaction, just hives that could be controlled with Benadryl. But I’ve luckily grown out of that and can now eat peaches with no problem.

  • @joshbrackelsberg9626
    @joshbrackelsberg9626 Před 5 lety +11

    I'm surprised but I didn't hear him mention the toxins a lot of nuts naturally have in them. Some species and people have more or less sensitivity and tolerance to the toxins.
    Mcaws have to eat clay everyday to help deal with the toxins from all the nuts they eat. I was half expecting him to mention it as a likely cause or to rule it out.

  • @jaded8578
    @jaded8578 Před 5 lety +147

    my friend claims to be allergic to hazelnuts but regularly eats nutella.. hmm

    • @AsjJohnson127
      @AsjJohnson127 Před 5 lety +24

      I'm supposedly allergic to almost every food imaginable, and have never had a noticeable reaction to any food. So... either food allergies can be super mild, or some people are allergic to the allergy test or something...

    • @lenasolheim3321
      @lenasolheim3321 Před 5 lety +18

      @@AsjJohnson127 I have many food allergies that are real, but my tests also blink allergic for foods I eat all the time that I never had a reaction to. You can have a very mild allergy thats reacts on a skin patch test but doesn't react while consuming the products, so you're right!

    • @aliendaniela
      @aliendaniela Před 5 lety +15

      I mean Nutella is like

    • @AC-qo8oq
      @AC-qo8oq Před 5 lety +14

      I use to eat Nutella as a kid all the time and would feel itchy afterwards, but I kept eating it because I liked it. My parents didn’t believe in allergies 😒 I thought everybody felt that way after eating Nutella. As an adult, I stopped but occasionally eat it and suffer the consequences

    • @jbh4151
      @jbh4151 Před 5 lety +6

      Your friend may just have a mild allergy to it

  • @kinglysander100
    @kinglysander100 Před 2 lety

    I’ve had the same thing! I had an allergic reaction but my doctor had no idea what it is.

  • @yoshiSBX
    @yoshiSBX Před 2 lety

    My suspicion lies in 1) preservatives, additives, emulsifiers, antibiotics etc in packaged & processed foods or medicines. Also chlorinated water. I suspect it affects gut flora, possibly leading to rise of allergies 2) EDCs from plastic, due to their effects on the endocrine system.
    What d’you think Dr Joe Hanson?

  • @awesomness6775
    @awesomness6775 Před 3 lety +68

    I used to love 4 fruits/vegetables before I randomly started reacting to them. Now I am allergic to Watermelon, Carrots, Grapes, and Bananas.
    It's like my body doesn't want me to eat healthily.

    • @laurac.g.1347
      @laurac.g.1347 Před 3 lety +13

      In my case, i have developed an intolerance to chocolate and processed cakes and sweets. If i eat any of this, i will have all my body covered with hives for days. My body wants me to eat healthily

    • @jillting1852
      @jillting1852 Před 3 lety +4

      Maybe they are gmo

    • @sandpiper_
      @sandpiper_ Před 3 lety +2

      oh my dad is allergic to carrots.

    • @neuralmute
      @neuralmute Před 2 lety +6

      Me too - I used to be able to *live* on fresh fruit! My grandparents had an orchard, and fruit was just what I ate. Then I had a weird allergic reaction to a nectarine about 20 yrs. ago. Cherries were next. And a couple more the next year. Now I'm allergic to more fruits and vegetables than I can actually eat, unless they're thoroughly cooked or processed. Since I'm also allergic to a whole load of nuts and legumes, these days I live on a lot of grains, dairy, and processed fruits & veggies; ie. canned fruits, or stewed tomatoes. And croissants from the Farmers' Market. :9
      I discussed this oddity with my allergist, and her explanation was amazing: I've been cross-reacting to certain proteins in these foods that are similar to those in certain tree pollens that I'm severely allergic to, and so my body is reacting to these foods raw as if I'd just taken a great big mouthful of (for example) birch pollen. My immune system is a complete assh*le. But thoroughly cooking the foods I react to raw breaks down the offending proteins enough that they can slip past my haywire immune system, though it still kind of sucks, as I still can't handle them enough to do the cooking myself. XP

    • @AllenReviews
      @AllenReviews Před 2 lety +1

      Those aren’t healthy

  • @TheXev
    @TheXev Před 5 lety +12

    My body has only had a food allergic reaction when in used in combination with something else. In my case if I am taking the antibiotic bactrim, and then eat my favorite Chinese food: House Speical Fried Rice, I will then have a reaction where I must regurgitate the food or blackout pass out. I can normally take bactrim on its own or House Speical Fried Rice on its own, but not the two together! I no longer get prescribed bactrim when I need an antibiotic just a precaution now.|
    The other allergic reaction I have had is when using fabric softener. I went 6 months when I first entered college and didn't use fabric softener in my laundry due to my lack of funds. I then purchased fabric softener and washed my laundry only to break out in hives (a condition my Grandfather on my father's side also had). I thought at first I had lost some kind of built of tolerance I had acquired over the years of by not using fabric softener, but later was able to wear fabric softener washed clothes if I did my laundry at home. My home has well water, in college I lived in an apartment and used city water. While fabric softener will now make me a little ichy regardless, I will get full blown hives if I wash my laundry only when using fabric softener + a city water source.
    I am no doctor, but I have to wonder if in Emily's case it is a combination of things: That particular cereal she was consuming, plus the almond milk. We as humans are a complicated set of chemicals ourselves, why is it hard to imagine that mixing compounds together then adding to our own chemical makeups would always go smoothly, even if alone those two things are okay?

  • @raiarthur7873
    @raiarthur7873 Před 2 lety

    I had the same experience with Emily! I was in a morning class and then i started itching on my legs, i couldn't see under my pants so i went to the comfort room and found hives all over my legs and I started feeling hot and dizzy. I only had coffee for breakfast but had a reaction. Sent myself to the doctor and they didn't know the reason why and how i got the reaction, they gave me antihistamine for it.