It seems that food allergies are becoming so common that they are just accepted as a part of modern life. But food allergies are a recent phenomenon. The first case of food allergy (milk) was published in 1901.(2) First case of nut allergy -1920.(3) Sesame allergy – 1950. (4) First case of Brazil nut anaphylaxis in the UK - 1983. (5) First known case of lupin allergy – 1994 (6)
Our allergy “experts” would have us believe that food allergies are a side effect of being too “clean”. (7) This so-called "Hygiene theory" has been printed so many times now it isn't even questioned in medical circles. And our medical community has no idea why our "clean" bodies suddenly start reacting to foods. According to the The Complete Idiot's Guide to Food Allergies: the IgE antibodies that cause food allergies can just happen to be appear out of the ether:
"A baby can be born allergic, or a heretofore unafflicted adult can develop an allergy out of the blue."( 8)
Food Allergies for Dummies disagrees:
"A virgin immune system has no reason to launch an all-out attack on a harmless food. It has to be properly sensitized to the food first (through an initial exposure)."(9)
One of the first vaccines given to children, DTaP10), contains casein. (11) Casein allergy usually appears in children in the first few months of life. (12) The same company that manufactures the DTaP vaccine (13) also sells baby formula.(14) Gee, what a coincidence!
One of the vaccines given to children at two months of age is the Pneumococcal conjugate (PCV7) (15). The package insert states “Each serotype is grown in soy peptone broth”. Soy? “A soy allergy is most common in infants and is usually noticed by 3 months of age.” (16) Does the same manufacturer of this vaccine also make infant formula? Yep. (17) (18)
They can be mixed together. Patents for vaccine adjuvants list the oils used. (19)
“8. The pharmaceutical emulsion of claim 1, wherein the oil phase further comprises almond oil; babassu oil; borage oil; black currant seed oil; canola oil; castor oil; coconut oil; corn oil; cottonseed oil; emu oil; evening primrose oil; flax seed oil; grapeseed oil; groundnut oil; mustard seed oil; olive oil; palm oil; palm kernel oil; peanut oil; rapeseed oil; safflower oil; sesame oil; shark liver oil; soybean oil; sunflower oil; hydrogenated castor oil; hydrogenated coconut oil; hydrogenated palm oil; hydrogenated soybean oil; hydrogenated vegetable oil; a mixture of hydrogenated cottonseed oil and hydrogenated castor oil; partially hydrogenated soybean oil; a mixture of partially hydrogenated soybean oil and partially hydrogenated cottonseed oil; glyceryl trioleate; glyceryl trilinoleate; glyceryl trilinolenate; a Ω3 polyunsaturated fatty acid triglyceride containing oil; or a mixture thereof.” (20)
“..In contrast, complex media will use extracts of a variety of things, including left-over animal parts (cow brains and hearts), yeast (from brewing) or digests of plants or animal slurries (peptones are one example of this category). The exact composition of these extracts is often unknown. The sources of these extracts often take advantage of waste products from other industries to save money....” (21)
“Vegetables preferably used are of leaf and root types e.g. various cabbages, beets, rutabaga, carrot, pumpkin, spinach, beet, watermelon, melon, peanut, artichoke, eggplant, pepper sweet, asparagus, and tomato. Fruits to be preferably used are apples, pears, kiwi, plums, citrus, apricots, grapes/raisins, mango, guava, bananas, biwa, cornel, fig, cherry plum, quince, peach, pomegranate, avocado, pineapple, date, papaya. Berries preferably include raspberry, bilberry, guelder rose, dog rose, ash berry (red and black), currant (red, black, and white), sea-buckthorn berries, gooseberry, schizandra, blackberry, cowberry, bird cherry, cranberry, sweet cherry, cherry, and strawberry. Preferred herbs and their roots are ginseng, celery, parsley, dill, dandelion, nettle, ginseng, and spinach. Preferred high protein products are offals including spleen, kidney, heart, liver, brains, maw, and stomach as well as mushrooms, sea products (fish, mussel, plankton for example), eggs or nuts. Preferred products of beekeeping are propolis, honey, royal jelly, and pollen of flower.” (22)
“An adjuvant is a vaccine component that boosts the immune response to the vaccine. The adjuvant effects of aluminum were discovered in 1926. Aluminum adjuvants are used in vaccines such as hepatitis A, hepatitis B, diphtheria-tetanus-containing vaccines, Haemophilus influenzae type b, and pneumococcal vaccines, but they are not used in the live, viral vaccines, such as measles, mumps, rubella, varicella, or rotavirus.”(23)
Injections have been used to create allergies in test animals. Any food protein remaining in the vaccine from the culture medium or diluent oils when injected along with an adjuvant can cause a food allergy.(28)
“Scientists don’t know why the incidence of food allergy is increasing." (1)
NO COPYRIGHT!!! Copy this as much as you want along with anything else on this site! Spread the word. Tell your friends. Don't let even one more child be injured from vaccinations!
(1) http://www.foodallergywalk.org/site/PageServer?pagename=DidYouKnow , Food allergy and Anaphylaxis Network, 2009
(2) Diseases of the small intestine in childhood, By John Walker-Smith, Simon Murch, page 206, published 1999
(3) Peanut Allergy Answer Book, by Michael C. Young, 2001
(4) http://www.kidswithfoodallergies.org/resourcespre.php?id=107&title=sesame_allergy , Kids with Food Allergies, Sesame Allergy: a growing food allergy, Updated 5/2/2009
(5) http://www.allergy-clinic.co.uk/food_allergy_for_doctors.htm , Surrey Allergy Clinic, Food Allergy and Additive Intolerance, by Dr. Adrian Morris, January 2006
(6) www.cbc.ca/health/story/2005/04/08/lupin-allergy050408.html , CBC News.CA, Avoid lupin flour, doctors tell patients with peanut allergies, April 8, 2005
(7) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17935569, Hygiene theory and allergy and asthma prevention. Division of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Department of Pediatrics, National Jewish Medical and Research Center, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, CO 80206, USA. liua@njc.org Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol. 2007 Nov;21 Suppl 3:2-7. PMID: 17935569
[8] The Complete Idiot's Guide to Food Allergies by Lee H. Freude, M.D., and Jeanne Rejaunier, Penguin Group, 2003, page 8
[9] Food Allergies for Dummies by Robert A. Wood, MD, Professor of Pediatrics and Chief of Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine with Jo Kraynak, Wiley Publishing, Inc. 2007, page 33
(10) http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/vis/downloads/vis-dtap.pdf
(11) http://www.know-vaccines.org/faq.html , American Academy of Pediatrics Recommended Vaccination, Schedule for Infants & Pre-School Children, 2009
(12) http://www.babycareadvice.com/babycare/general_help/article.php?id=19 , Milk allergy or intolerance, Written by Rowena Bennett, RN, RM, RPN, CHN, Grad Dip Health Promotion., Added Nov 2003. Reviewed April 2004.
(13) http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/230466/the_hepatitis_b_vaccine_what_the_manufacturers.html?cat=71 , The Hepatitis B Vaccine: What the Manufacturer's Insert Tells Us, May 08, 2007 by Alisa Elizabeth King Terry , …”GlaxoSmithKline's package insert for the Hepatitis B vaccine…”
(14) www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/08/06/1998103.htm, Firms fight Philippine rules on baby milk, Updated Mon Aug 6, 2007, “... of multinational companies like Abbott, GlaxoSmithKline and Wyeth. Last year those companies and other infant formula producers”
(15) http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/vis/downloads/vis-pneumoconjugate.pdf
(16) http://www.uofmchildrenshospital.org/healthlibrary/content/pa_soyalle_pep.htm, University of Minnesota, Amplatz Children’s Hospital, Pedriatric Advisor, Soy allergy, Written by Terri Murphy, RD, CDE for RelayHealth. Published by RelayHealth. Last modified: 2009-01-22 , Last reviewed: 2008-11-11
(17) http://uk.sys-con.com/node/1033919, Israel Adds Wyeth's 7-valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine (PCV7) to their National Immunisation Programme, By: PR Newswire, Jul. 14, 2009
(18) http://www.wyethnutritionals.com/Baby/baby_golden.htm , Wyeth Nutrition, “Extensively hydrolyzed cow’s milk formulas have had all of their protein broken down into smaller segments to make an allergic reaction less likely. These formulas are recommended for infants with severe food allergies. These formulas can be expensive and are less patatable.”
(19) http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/5753234/description.html, US Patent 5753234 - Single-shot vaccine formulation
(20) http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/6720001/claims.html, US Patent 6720001 - Emulsion compositions for polyfunctional active ingredients
(21) http://www.bionewsonline.com/3/what_is_growth_medium.htm, Microbiological growth medium
(22) http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/6953574/description.html, US Patent 6953574 - Method for producing a fermented hydrolyzed medium containing microorganisms
(23) http://www.chop.edu/consumer/jsp/division/generic.jsp?id=88173, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Feature Article: Aluminum And Vaccines: What You Should Know, 2008
(24) Allergy 1978 Jun:33(3):155-9 Aluminum phosphate but not calcium phosphate stimulates the specific IgE response in guinea pigs to tetanus toxoid. It is hypothesized that the regular application of aluminum compound-containing vaccines on the entire population could be one of the factors leading to the observed increase of allergic diseases. PMID 707792
(25) eMJA The Medical Journal of Australia, http://www.mja.com.au/public/issues/184_04_200206/eld10500_fm.html, Egg-related allergy is common, particularly in children with asthma or general allergies, and may be as high as 40% in children with moderate to severe atopic dermatitis. The risk of egg-related allergy after vaccination depends on the presence of egg protein in the final product.
(26) The more typical route of sensitization however, is via the absorption of aluminum through hyposensitization injections and vaccines.[“ Dermatitis. 2005;16(3):115-120. ©2005 American Contact Dermatitis Society
(28) http://dermatology.cdlib.org/DOJvol5num1/reviews/black.html, Delayed Type Hypersensitivity: Current Theories with an Historic Perspective, C. Allen Black, Ph.D., Dermatology Online Journal 5(1): 7 , Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences Magee-Womens Research Institute Pittsburgh, “