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Before SLIT

One day before starting SLIT, I tested the strength of my normal allergic reactions. I played with my cat for fifteen minutes, petting her to send her shed fur in the air and keeping my face  at most a foot away from her. Here are the symptoms I noticed, as well as when I began to notice them and when they started to fade away: 0:00- Start playing with cat 6:30- Nose begins to itch 8:00- Nose starts running, becomes congested 13:15- Sneeze four times 15:00- Stop playing with cat 21:30- Nose still itchy, congested 25:00- Sneeze four times 27:50- Nose stops itching 36:00- Sneeze four times ~5:00:00- Congestion stops There were some problems that I ran into. The first was that my cat, being hyper and having an attention span of two milliseconds, kept running off and attacking things. I dealt with this by shutting her in my room, so she wouldn't get too far, and next time I will do this experiment when she is tired so she doesn't want to go attack things. Another issue...

A Cure for Allergies

This blog is for my 20% time project in Anatomy and Physiology. In 20% time, we spend twenty percent of our class time working on a project we are interested in. I have severe cat allergies, but I also have a cat, and so I wondered  if there was a way to treat or even get rid of my allergies. I went to the doctor and found out about a procedure named sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT),  which is a relatively new procedure in which you put a drop of whatever you're allergic to under your tongue, training your immune system to no longer react to it. Typically, this process takes about three to five years. This procedure is much more convenient and safe than its cousin, subcutaneous immunotherapy, or allergy shots, which have been studied much more extensively and basically do the same thing, but using shots rather than drops. I decided to try SLIT, but because of the lack of available information on this procedure, I wanted to do an experiment of my own which would answer my ques...