Helminthic therapy and immunoglobulin E (IgE)
Helminth infections are universally associated with responses characterised by Th2 cytokines, high levels of IgE, eosinophilia and mastocytosis.
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Individuals who maintain a hookworm colony for therapeutic purposes will typically see an increase in IgE following inoculation, but these levels should decrease over time. One doctor who practises functional medicine has reported observing the reduction of an IgE level of 1,000 in a highly allergic patient, to normal, in just a few weeks following the introduction of helminths.
- Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D., Episode 13 (Watch from 54.00 minutes.)
When one individual expressed concern that his IgE antibodies are always elevated above normal levels, even when compared to the time before he hosted hookworms, and that this persistent elevation might be permanent, a medical doctor with a special interest in helminthic therapy - who also hosts helminths himself - responded with this:
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William Parker, formerly Associate Professor of Surgery at Duke University, has opined that what we consider to be 'normal' in terms of the immune system may be anything but normal.
A medical doctor has commented thus:
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And a team of researchers looking to improve the diagnosis of helminth infections in travelers and migrants returning to Germany from the tropics concluded that, while eosinophil counts are clearly associated with helminthic infections, total IgE was not helpful in differentiating helminth infections from other causes of eosinophilia in this group. [5]
See also[edit | edit source]
- The immunoepidemiology of human hookworm infection (To obtain a full text copy, see Obtaining copies of scientific papers.)