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No, honey can’t cure your allergies
AI Summary
This engaging news video debunks the popular myth that local honey can cure seasonal allergies, explaining the science of immunotherapy and how allergies actually work. B1 learners will build health and medical vocabulary including 'histamines,' 'allergic rhinitis,' 'immunotherapy,' 'antihistamines,' and 'antimicrobial,' while learning to follow a logical argument that separates fact from fiction.
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Subtitles (29 segments)
DownloadThe theory goes like this. Flowers produce pollen. They also produce nectar, which bees collect to make honey. When they do that, they take some pollen with them. So, bee honey usually contains some pollen. So, here's the theory.
When you eat locally produced honey, your body is ingesting small amounts of local pollen, the stuff that would normally make you miserable during allergy season and building an immunity to it. In other words, it basically is
like micro doing the allergies in your area. I wanted to know if this was true.
I found out that it isn't, but it's worth learning why. Because even though honey probably won't cure your pollen allergy, it could still be part of the solution. Seasonal allergies, also known as hay fever or allergic rhinitis, are your body overreacting to harmless pollen in the environment.
When your immune system mistakes a specific type of pollen for a dangerous intruder, it goes into defense mode, releasing chemicals called histamines, which are
meant to drive the allergen back out of your body by making you sneeze, cough, itch, and generally feel miserable. In other words, they trigger an allergic reaction. And once you have an allergy, it's hard to get rid of because your immune system has a memory. Once it decides something is a threat, it won't forget.
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Key Vocabulary (15)
Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.
People refers to a group of human beings or the general public. It is the standard plural form of the word 'person'.
The whole physical structure of a person or animal, including the bones, skin, and internal organs. It is used to describe the entire physical being of a living or deceased entity.
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