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What Allergies Cannot Be Treated and Why?

Date added:
Thursday, 25 June 2009
Last revised:
never
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Answer

The treatments performed at AllergiCare Relief Centers can only address conditions caused by inappropriate reactions to harmless substances or stimuli. If the condition involves pathogens, (bacteria, viruses, or parasites) the treatment will not be able to affect such cases.

AllergiCare Relief Centers cannot treat lactose intolerance. If the symptoms are related to an allergy to milk or other dairy products, the treatment can be very effective. However, lactose intolerance is not an allergy, it is the inability to digest certain amounts of lactose, the major sugar found in milk. The condition is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme lactase, which is produced by the cells of the lining in the small intestine. Lactose intolerance is often confused with dairy allergies because the symptoms are similar, yet they are untreated. However, the two conditions can occur together and in such cases, the treatment can offer partial benefit.

While Advanced Allergy and AllergiCare Relief Centers can treat most all forms of allergies or sensitivities, some cases do not respond to the treatment. Allergies can be complicated. For example, a person can have a reaction after eating strawberries, but if treated for strawberries, the symptoms still remain. The true allergy or sensitivity might be to a specific component of strawberries which, when treated, will eliminate the reaction.

Another example is cat allergies. Some people will no longer react when treated specifically to cat dander. Yet others do not respond to the treatment. The key is to find the exact substance that the body is identifying as a threat. For those people who still react to cats after treatment, an additional substance may be contributing, such as glandular oil protein or a specific protein in cat saliva.

Treatment may also be complicated by multiple symptoms, some of which may not be the result of an allergy. In addition, some sufferers have more than one substance contributing to one specific allergy symptom. This compounds the challenge in identifying the correct substance responsible for the reaction. Our network of professionals conduct extensive, on-going research to increase the number of complicated allergies successfully treated.