Do antihistamines block eosinophils?

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asked Feb 22 in Other- Health by Stargazerroses (2,260 points)
Do antihistamines block eosinophils?

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answered Mar 26 by Ratiguga (20,740 points)
Antihistamines can and do block eosinophils.

Antihistamines have been found to reverse the survival-prolonging effect of IL-5 in eosinophils by enhancing apoptosis.

JNK has been found to be activated slowly during diphenhydramine-induced eosinophil apoptosis.

The antibiotic that is best for eosinophilia is penicillin and cephalosporins.

The tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib, the first and only drug approved for hypereosinophilic syndrome, can be an effective treatment to reduce blood eosinophil levels, but only for people who harbor genetic alterations that involve fusion genes that result in hypereosinophilic syndrome.

Eosinophilia has been observed in cancer, including colorectal, breast, ovarian, cervical, oral squamous, Hodgkin's lymphoma and prostate cancer.

The level of eosinophils that indicate leukemia is 1.5 x 109 /L or higher that lasts over time.

Lung eosinophilia is infiltration of eosinophils into the lung compartments constituting airways, interstitium, and alveoli.

Several different types of infections, drugs, parasites, autoimmune processes, malignancies, and obstructive lung diseases have been associated with increased eosinophils in the lungs.

Symptoms of eosinophilia can include weight loss, fevers, night sweats, fatigue, cough, chest pain, swelling, stomachache, rash, pain, weakness, confusion, and coma.

Additional symptoms of this syndrome depend on which organs are damaged.

Processes known to cause modest eosinophilia include allergic disease, parasitic disease, drug allergy, and mastocytosis.

More significant eosinophilia is often caused by drug allergy, aspirin exacerbated respiratory disease, sustained and significant atopic dermatitis, and some parasitic disorders.

Parasites and allergies to medicines are common causes of eosinophilia.

Hypereosinophilia can cause organ damage.

This is called hypereosinophilic syndrome.

The cause for this syndrome is often unknown.

Over 500 eosinophils per microliter of blood is thought to be eosinophilia in adults.

Over 1,500 is thought to be hypereosinophilia if the count remains high for many months.

Eosinophilia is uncommon in healthy individuals, however, it is associated with allergies, helminth infections and some inflammatory states.

Eosinophilia has also been observed in cancer, including colorectal, breast, ovarian, cervical, oral squamous, Hodgkin's lymphoma and prostate cancer.

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