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Red Meat Allergies Caused By Tick Bites Are On The Rise (npr.org)

Tick bites can cause all sorts of nasty afflictions. And if you're bitten by a Lone Star tick, here's one more to add to the list: a red meat allergy. NPR reports: About 10 years ago, Dr. Scott Commins, an allergist and associate professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, was among the first physicians to identify the allergy in patients with tick bites. Back then, there were just a few dozen known cases. That has increased dramatically. "We're confident the number is over 5,000 [cases], and that's in the U.S. alone," Commins says. There are also cases in Sweden, Germany and Australia -- likely linked to other species of ticks. In the U.S., the Lone Star tick has expanded its range beyond the Southeast, and there are documented cases of alpha gal meat allergies farther north -- including New York, Maine and Minnesota. "The range of the tick is expanding," says Commins. So is awareness about the red meat allergy it can cause. "We have a blood test, and the word is getting out."

14 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. This time, they've gone too far! by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 4, Funny

    Tick bites can cause all sorts of nasty afflictions. And if you're bitten by a Lone Star tick, here's one more to add to the list: a red meat allergy.

    Burn down nature! It's a luxury we can no longer afford!

  2. Notta problem by Tablizer · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's okay, I only eat vegetarian ticks.

  3. PETA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Can we tell if this tick has been genetically modified by PETA?

    1. Re:PETA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If the tick has been stolen out of someone's yard despite being microchipped, then kept in a cage for a couple of days before being killed by blunt force trauma from half a brick, then, yes. PETA have been at work.

    2. Re:PETA by pots · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's not the tick that causes the allergy, the tick just transmits a protein which is common to most mammals, but which apes lack. So our immune systems develop antibodies, and subsequently react to the presence of this protein.

      In other words: yes, we can tell if this tick has been genetically modified by PETA. It hasn't.

      I realize that was probably a joke, but people say some crazy shit about PETA sometimes...

  4. Re:Eating Meat by ChrisMaple · · Score: 4, Informative

    Have you ever seen a wild animal killed and eaten by a wild predator? Torn apart while not necessarily yet dead?

    And then there are the wild animals that die of starvation, freezing, disease, etc..

    In comparison, most domestic food animals live good lives and die quick deaths.

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  5. Semi-related anecdotes by Anubis+IV · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My wife spent a few years working in Southeast Asia. While there she started having symptoms like what you'd expect with lactose intolerance, except that she had always been able to drink milk without issue. She tried cutting milk out, but the symptoms continued. After talking with a local doctor, she found out that there was something different about the way they raised cows there, that the symptoms she was experiencing were not uncommon among Westerners who moved to the region, and that the reason the symptoms were persisting was because they could be caused by any cow-based product, not just milk.

    She had to cut out all beef, milk, and other cow-based products while she was there for a few years. By the time she got back to the West, she hadn't had cow's milk in over two years, so her body had lost the ability to process lactose entirely, leaving her well and truly lactose intolerant at that point. As for the issues with beef? So far as we know they disappeared as soon as she got back, though she was understandably gun shy about eating it for a few years. It wasn't until nearly a year into our marriage (three years after she had gotten back to the States) that I could convince her to even try beef again.

    Anyway, it's interesting to see how different establishments respond when she mentions she's lactose intolerant. She'll usually try to avoid the topic by simply asking if a dish contains milk or cream, rather than trying to explain things. If they ask why and she has to say the words "lactose intolerance", half of them react as if she had said she could die at any moment, at which point she needs to clarify that, no, she doesn't have an allergy and they don't need to scrub the kitchen down. The other half reacts dismissively, at which point she rattles off this line about loving milk and cream even though they don't love her, which usually convinces the wait staff that she isn't one of those people falsely claiming an intolerance for ideological/nutritional reasons.

    But, by far, my favorite reaction from a wait person was this time that we were ordering dessert at a decent restaurant and my wife asked if there were any desserts she'd be able to have, having mentioned earlier in the meal that she was lactose intolerant. After rattling off the list of desserts and acknowledging that each had cream, the waitress finished the list by saying, "I'll need to check on the creme brûlée, since I don't think it has cream in it." We didn't have the heart to tell her that it literally had "cream" in the name, and the waitress even asked "are you sure?" when we told her it definitely had cream in it.

    1. Re:Semi-related anecdotes by serviscope_minor · · Score: 2

      B) She's tried Lactaid pills on more than one occasion. At least so far, they haven't worked for her for some reason. If you have any additional advice we might be able to try, I'm all ears. She'd love to be able to eat real pizza and ice cream again.

      Have you checked for the rarer caesin allergy rather than lactose? Caesin obviously isn't affected by lactase enzymes (so the pills or lactoe removed milk won't help) but sufficiently cooked milk doesn't hae it (but does retain lactose). Also trying goat or sheep milk baed products may be revealing.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
  6. I can't say I'm surprised by hyades1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Lone Star Tick joins a long list of blood-sucking parasites from Texas. Most of the others, however, have been politicians.

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  7. Re:Let the healing begin by Immerman · · Score: 5, Funny

    >Not you though, vegans. Nobody likes you.

    You've cracked it, right there. There is no "lone star tick induced meat allergy" - it's just a convenient cover story to allow people to survive being vegetarian in Texas. :-D

    --
    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  8. Dogs... by dargaud · · Score: 2

    The spread of ticks and associated diases has multiple factors: lack of predators (dur to hunting), spread of some (imported) bushes where they shelter for the winter, warmer and wetter winters (they die if it's too dry or cold), etc... But one thing you can do about it is stop bringing your fucking dogs everywhere you go. That's how the ticks cross deserts or oceans.

    --
    Non-Linux Penguins ?
  9. Re: Let the healing begin by PseudoAnon · · Score: 3, Informative

    You had a great comment until you demonstrated the holier-than-thou attitude that leads people to dislike vegans as a group.

    People are more receptive to what others have to say when the people trying to spread behavioral change don't preach about being better than everyone else.

  10. Re:Eating Meat by Megol · · Score: 2

    I don't know why batteries would need cages, mine are mostly immobile with a few exceptions, but no - I haven't.

    I have however been to places with free range cows where the noise also can be deafening periodically and the stench is a bit rich (I don't vomit easily), but then the animals have chosen to congregate to a certain sport so not the noise nor the aroma can be too bad for the animals involved.
    I've also visited many places where birds choose to live in groups, ducks recently and sea birds of different kinds in other. Let me just describe the stench as strong if not immediately revolting and the noise level at times deafening. But the animals once again choose to spend time at those places, they could easily fly away to a nice secluded spot if that was desired.

  11. Vegan Conspiracy! by sycodon · · Score: 2

    Now we know what all those Vegans were doing slinking around in the woods!

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.