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eosinophilia , what kind of disease it is?

Discussion in 'General Chat' started by George Arun, Jul 7, 2015.

  1. #1
    eosinophilia , what kind of disease it is?

    do we need to take any precautions?
     
    George Arun, Jul 7, 2015 IP
  2. sarahk

    sarahk iTamer Staff

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    #2
    sarahk, Jul 8, 2015 IP
    wisdomtool and jrbiz like this.
  3. deathshadow

    deathshadow Acclaimed Member

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    #3
    Most of the online articles -- like wikipedia's -- are scientifically accurate, but not easily digestible by the layman.

    To put it far more simply, it means an overactive immune system response -- "eosinophil" is a big fancy word for "white blood cells", "eosiniophilia" simply meaning your body is pumping out more of them than it should be. Infections and allergic reactions can be the cause, though more dangerous underlying conditions can also trigger it.

    You'd think an elevated immune system would be a good thing, but even in mild cases it being "in overdrive" for too long can actually compromise the immune response because it never gets to 'rest'. As it continues to just go and go and go the quality of the white blood cells and effectiveness therein becomes compromised. You may have more of them, but they are less and less effective. In extreme cases their ability to sense hostiles can become compromised so they don't actually attack anything -- and in rare instances the white blood cells can even mistake other healthy cells as an invader and attack them instead.

    In that last scenario dead skin cells are most commonly mistaken for infection, resulting in rosatia, hives and other skin irritations. Since the outer layer of skin is mostly dead cells, including internally in the airways this can trigger inflamation of the airway that can in turn dial up the immune response even further. If allowed to go for too long it will then start chewing away at healthy tissues.

    Laughably healthy tissues put up a slightly better defense than unhealthy/tumorous/cancerous cells, which is how chemotherapy works. While left untreated eosinophilia can kill you, triggering it is also being investigated as a cancer treatment?!?

    If you are taking NSAID's or other anti-inflammatories, STOP. Antihistamines can help if an allergic reaction is the underlying cause , but as mentioned you really need to review what is causing it with a doctor as it's not so much a disease, as a symptom of something else! That "something else" could range from simpler environmental allergies to severe tissue damage and chronic illness.

    Just to say it again: SEE A DOCTOR. SOON!
     
    deathshadow, Jul 11, 2015 IP
  4. sarahk

    sarahk iTamer Staff

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    #4
    Or get that MFA website launched using @deathshadow's helpful summary :)
     
    sarahk, Jul 12, 2015 IP
  5. jaguar34

    jaguar34 Notable Member

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    #5
    Our lecturer once told us that wikipedia articles are not scientifically correct and that our college teachers has accurate information and we must refer to our teachers notes than searching online for resources. They tough us that binary is the most popular and widely used language in Computer Science today...
     
    jaguar34, Jul 16, 2015 IP
  6. sarahk

    sarahk iTamer Staff

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    #6
    You didn't pick your college very carefully did you?!
    If you are worried about this disease you need to talk to your doctor.
     
    sarahk, Jul 16, 2015 IP
  7. mentat47

    mentat47 Greenhorn

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    #7
    I couldn't make heads or tails of the medical terminology, but it does sound serious.
     
    mentat47, Jul 16, 2015 IP
  8. sarahk

    sarahk iTamer Staff

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    #8
    I wonder if @George Arun will tell us how he's getting on...
     
    sarahk, Jul 17, 2015 IP