Chemical Immune Reactivity
Cross-source consensus on Chemical Immune Reactivity from 1 sources and 7 claims.
1 sources · 7 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Toxic chemicals can form covalent adducts with tissue proteins and DNA. — Exposome and Autoimmunity: Food, Chemical, and Pathogen Immune Reactivity
- Chemical adducts are described as neo-antigens that can be recognized by the immune system as foreign. — Exposome and Autoimmunity: Food, Chemical, and Pathogen Immune Reactivity
- The meaningful diagnostic measure is antibodies against chemicals bound to human tissue. — Exposome and Autoimmunity: Food, Chemical, and Pathogen Immune Reactivity
- Antibodies against chemical-protein adducts can crossreact with native human tissue antigens and contribute to autoimmunity. — Exposome and Autoimmunity: Food, Chemical, and Pathogen Immune Reactivity
- The article argues that measuring chemical concentration in urine or blood is not the meaningful autoimmune signal. — Exposome and Autoimmunity: Food, Chemical, and Pathogen Immune Reactivity
- Chemical antibody detection should lead to locating and removing the exposure source. — Exposome and Autoimmunity: Food, Chemical, and Pathogen Immune Reactivity
- Removing a chemical exposure is presented as a way to interrupt neo-antigen formation and potentially prevent autoimmune progression. — Exposome and Autoimmunity: Food, Chemical, and Pathogen Immune Reactivity