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Editorial
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Volume 346:1320-1322 April 25, 2002 Number 17
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The Nuts and Bolts of Peanut Allergy

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 by Sampson, H. A.
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In this issue of the Journal, Sampson1 reviews the clinical features of allergy to peanuts. The question is why, in a small but apparently increasing percentage of the population, does the ingestion of a seemingly innocuous and healthful food result in an allergic reaction?

The clinical manifestations of an allergic reaction to foods are the end result of an orchestrated series of events involving the immune system that have their origins in a prior exposure to the offending allergen (Figure 1). During the initial exposure, which may occur in utero, during breast-feeding, or in early childhood, antibodies of . . . [Full Text of this Article]

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