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Food Allergy Center - Wilmington, NC

Wilmington Asthma & Allergy Specialist Doctors for Food Allergy

Type of Physician: Asthma & Allergy Specialist

What is a Asthma & Allergy Specialist?

A certification by the Board of Allergy & Immunology; practitioners are expert in the evaluation, diagnosis and management of immune disorders.

Specialty: Allergy, Asthma & Immunology

Common Name: Allergy Doctor

Asthma & Allergy Specialist Doctors in Wilmington *

Southeastern Asthma & Allergy Associates
Donald M MacQueen
2321 Delaney Ave
Wilmington, NC 28403
(910) 763-1661

Southeastern Asthma & Allergy Associates
Alex G Yip
2321 Delaney Ave
Wilmington, NC 28403
(910) 763-1661

Eastern ENT Sinus & Allergy Center PA
Michael D Johnson
504 Balsey St
Clinton, NC 28328
(919) 592-9993

Eastern ENT Sinus & Allergy Center PA
Daniel Whitley
504 Balsey St
Clinton, NC 28328
(919) 592-9993

Seaboard Allergy & Asthma Clinic
Leonor C Carrasco
905 N Queen St
STE C
Kinston, NC 28501
(252) 523-5461

Seaboard Allergy & Asthma Clinic
Hanan S Kirollos
905 N Queen St
STE C
Kinston, NC 28501
(252) 523-5461

Allergy & Asthma Clinic Of New Bern
James M Zechman
2417 Neuse Blvd
New Bern, NC 28562
(252) 636-2625

Lafayette Clinic PA
Joseph V Follett
2125 Valleygate Dr
STE 201
Fayetteville, NC 28304
(910) 323-1322

Lafayette Clinic PA
John W Georgitis
2125 Valleygate Dr
STE 201
Fayetteville, NC 28304
(910) 323-1322

Allergy Partners of Fayetteville
William T Corder
1317 Medical Dr
Fayetteville, NC 28304
(910) 323-3890

Allergy Partners of Fayetteville
Neena Sodhi
1317 Medical Dr
Fayetteville, NC 28304
(910) 323-3890

East Carolina Ear Nose & Throat
N Daniel Catz
927 N Brightleaf Blvd
Smithfield, NC 27577
(919) 934-0948

Wilmington, North Carolina

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Food Allergy

Introduction to food allergies

Either food allergy or food intolerance affects nearly everyone at some point. When people have an unpleasant reaction to something they ate, they often think that they have an allergy to the food. Actually, however, only up to 3% of adults and 6%-8% of children have clinically proven true allergic reactions to food.

This difference between the prevalence of clinically proven food allergy and the public's perception of the problem is due primarily to misinterpreting food intolerance or other adverse food reactions to food as food allergy. A true food allergy is an abnormal response to food that is triggered by a specific reaction in the immune system and expressed by certain, often characteristic, symptoms. Other kinds of reactions to foods that are not food allergies include food intolerances (such as lactose or milk intolerance), food poisoning, and toxic reactions. Food intolerance also is an abnormal response to food, and its symptoms can resemble those of food allergy. Food intolerance, however, is far more prevalent, occurs in a variety of diseases, and is triggered by several different mechanisms that are distinct from the immunological reaction responsible for food allergy.

People who have food allergies must identify and prevent them because, although usually mild and not severe, these reactions can cause devastating illness and, in rare instances, can be fatal.

How do allergic reactions to food occur?

The allergens in food are those components that are responsible for inciting an allergic reaction. They are proteins that usually resist the heat of cooking, the acid in the stomach, and the intestinal digestive enzymes. As a result, the allergens survive to cross the gastrointestinal lining, enter the bloodstream, and go to target organs, causing allergic reactions throughout the body. The mechanism of food allergy involves the immune system...

Recommended Reading Related to Food Allergy

Hives »

Hives facts

  • Hives (medically known as urticaria) are red, itchy, raised areas of skin that appear in varying shapes and sizes.
  • Hives are very common and most often their cause is elusive.
  • Hives can change size rapidly and to move around, disappearing in one place and reappearing in other places, often in a matter of hours.
  • Ordinary hives flare up suddenly.
  • Physical hives are hives produced by direct physical stimulation of the skin.
  • Treatment of hives is directed at symptom relief while the condition goes away on its own.
  • Antihistamines are the most common treatment for hives.
  • Hives typically are not associated with long-term or serious complications.

What are hives (urticaria) and angioedema?

Hives (medically known as urticaria) appear on the skin as wheals that are red, very itchy, smoothly elevated areas of skin often with a blanched center. They ap...

Emergency Contact for Wilmington

  • In case of Emergency, call 911

Nearby Wilmington Hospitals *

New Hanover Regional Medical Center
2131 S 17th St
Wilmington, NC 28401
(910)343-7000

Cape Fear Hospital
5301 Wrightsville Ave
Wilmington, NC 28403
(910)452-8100

Dosher Memorial Hospital
924 N Howe St
Southport, NC 28461
(910)457-3800

Pender Memorial Hospital
507 E Freemont St
Burgaw, NC 28425
(910)259-5451

Brunswick Community Hospital
1 Medical Center Dr
Supply, NC 28462
(910)755-8121

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