Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A limited-ingredient diet, also known as limited-antigen food, [8] is an elimination diet that restricts the problematic foods that cause a reaction. Usually these diets focus on removing specific proteins (protein-elimination diets) due to dietary allergies usually being caused by water-soluble glycoproteins, [9] [10] but they can also be targeted towards the removal of gluten/wheat ...
Although first described in 1994, [1] [2] [3] it was first documented in the U.S. by Scott Commins and Thomas Platts-Mills during their research on alpha-gal allergy. [4] It is called "pork–cat syndrome" because it is a cross-reactivity where an allergy to cat serum albumin (protein made by a cat's liver) [4] cross-reacts with pork albumin ...
Woman blowing her nose. If you suspect you have seasonal allergies you’re not alone: the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America notes that over 24 million Americans experience the same thing ...
Ham: You can give a very small piece of ham, as long as your cat is not obese. If your cat is overweight, do not give this type of meat, as it can provoke pancreatitis in some cats.
In January 2011, the Belgian Federal Agency for the Safety of the Food Chain stated that people are not allowed to kill random cats walking in their garden, but "nowhere in the law does it say that you can't eat your own pet cat, dog, rabbit, fish, or whatever. You just have to kill them in an animal-friendly way."
The death of an Oregon house cat and a pet food recall are raising questions about the ongoing outbreak of bird flu and how people can protect their pets. Bird flu has been spreading for years in ...
Alpha-gal syndrome (AGS), also known as alpha-gal allergy or mammalian meat allergy (MMA), [1] is a type of acquired allergy characterized by a delayed onset of symptoms (3–8 hours) after ingesting mammalian meat. The condition results from past exposure to certain tick bites and was first reported in 2002.
You can still get all of your amino acids through plant-based foods, but you'll need to eat complimentary proteins, such as rice with beans. From poultry and beef to pork, lamb, and bison, there's ...