Histamine in a sentence as a noun

Once released, the histamine stops them releasing any more.

There are cases of people with MS who have seen tremendous improvement on a low histamine or paleo style diet.

These "basophils" release histamine when the cells are under attack.

Its pro-histamine effects are mostly observed in the CNS, and not in the rest of the body.

They gave me an allergy panel, but only the pure histamine gave the bumpy itchy response.

It breaks down into an opioid in the body, and some of us produce a histamine response from it.

Because the proposed mechanism has nothing to do with histamine or immune response.

It is used as a cough medicine because it breaks disulfide bonds in mucus and liquefies it, making it easier to cough up." * L-Histidine - histamine precursor.

However, it appears that Modafinil is a "pro-histamine" which would mean that it could aggregate allergy symptoms.

There's realms and realms of support groups that get to sign off on "authorized" network equipment, and when you bypass them it's the equivalent to a histamine reaction.

The others are: * quercetin - "Studies done in test tubes have shown quercetin may affect immune cells from releasing histamines which might influence symptoms of allergies.

Meaning that in low doses it acts like an anti-histaminergic drug, having a very limited effect on dopaminergic systems.

It is not illegal for me to suggest someone take a pill if they have a headache, offer a friend an anti-histamine, put a plaster on my girl-friend's cut, or clean my nephew's scraped knee with anti-septic.

This allows norepinephrine, serotonin and histamine to be more effective at naturally produced levels.

The study, replicated in four different labs, found that homeopathic solutions - so dilute that they probably didn't contain a single histamine molecule - worked just like histamine.

As much as your statement on acidity is true, there is also another explanation why this person's mouth is tingling while eating tomatoes, and that could be a histamine intolarence since tomatoes are high in histamine.

[...] Currently, the first-line therapy for AU is an oral administration of nonsedating, second-generation H1 antihistamines, but many patients may require further interventions to have adequate symptomatic control.

Since inflammation appears to be a key process resulting from the EMF and/or chemical effects on tissues, and histamine release is potentially a major trait of inflammation, we systematically measured histamine in the blood of patients.

I got curious and started to search out some other reading[0]:> The pathogenesis of [aquagenic urticaria] AU is poorly understood at this time, and it appears to be mediated in both a histamine-dependent and independent manner.

Both disorders appear to paint a common picture of inflammation-related hyper-histaminemia, oxidative stress, autoimmune response and BBB opening, and a deficit in melatonin excretion.

I am not a neurologist, and I know that the histamine receptor family can have very contradictory effects due to them being a modulator of the release levels of neurotransmitters dopaminergic and serotonergic pathways, and is also more publicly famous as being the target of the antagonist, Benadryl.

Histamine definitions

noun

amine formed from histidine that stimulates gastric secretions and dilates blood vessels; released by the human immune system during allergic reactions