Red indicates parts of the brain with more histamine-related gene expression, blue regions have comparatively less. The genes (HDC, HNMT, ALDH7A1, MAOB, HRH1, HRH2, HRH3, HRH4) play many different ...
Vascular endothelial cells are well known to play an important role in regulating tissue blood flow and metabolism, regulating blood coagulation and fibrinolysis, and forming a site for inflammatory ...
Allergic inflammation plays a big role in allergy reactions and contributes to the itching and chewing commonly seen with allergies. Histamine is an important part of this inflammatory process. The ...
When you take an allergy pill and feel foggy for the rest of the afternoon, you are experiencing a crude demonstration of ...
For years, reactions to histamine-rich foods like red wine, aged cheeses, and dark chocolate were dismissed as vague "sensitivities" or even psychosomatic quirks in mainstream medicine. Histamine ...
The relationship between food allergies and chronic illness represents one of the most significant yet underappreciated connections in modern health care. While conventional medicine has long ...
New research from King's College London and the University of Porto has mapped the histamine system in the brain. Histamine, a molecule more commonly associated with allergies, plays a separate but ...