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8,502 Views • Dec 25, 2022 • Click to toggle off description
#immunesystem #shorts
🟣Have you ever heard of this hypothesis?

🟣------
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YouTube Comments - 89 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@Peacefrogg

1 year ago

I grew up on a farm. I have zero allergies. My husband grew up in the city and his mother was really good at keeping a clean house. He has various allergies. I am a bad housewife. Our kids have no allergies.
I believe that our immune system needs to learn the difference between innocent microbes and pathogens. Exposure is key imo. Sounds logical. And it works for me. Completely unscientific motivation, so i hope someone will do the research to back it up.

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@joe_the_zombie

1 year ago

I've personally believed this for a while because I have a very strong immune system and I got into all sorts of nasty stuff when I was young

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@smeefbeef367

1 year ago

I was an extremely outdoorsy child, outside at least 5 hours a day year round because I lived in the south. I never had allergies at all, even though I moved dozens of times. Then I moved to the Midwest, and I spend maybe 10-20 hours a week outside. I have allergies now. They clear up for a few days when I go mountain biking, which is basically hours of HIIT in the fresh air so it makes some sense that exposure builds tolerance/immunity.

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@RandomAnimeGamer

1 year ago

It's complicated. Some things are affected this way, but others aren't. As a toddler I grew up in a daycare my mom worked at and was exposed to tons of bacteria. I got sick constantly as a kid and it built up my immune system. However, I suffer from extreme asthma and allergies. My asthma comes genetically from both my parents, but my allergies aren't really that well-explained.

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@nonyabizness.original

1 year ago

99% yea, back when kids grew up playing outside in the dirt together, they were way healthier than kids now who grow up inside playing clean and alone.

why? maybe the dirt part, maybe the togetherness part, maybe the playing (i.e. exercising) part, maybe the being outside part-- probably all four-- build and support health in four wholely different ways.

and maybe the converse of those four elements- germ-free, alone, sedentary, and inside buildings filled with a cornucopia of unnatural manmade air and objects and foods, erodes health in a bunch of ways.

great short vid! great smart kid! i love your channel 😀

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@johndieckmann3463

1 year ago

I’m 69 years and believe that this hypothesis is true to a certain extent. Mother always said “It takes a peck of dirt to kill you”.

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@MandoMTL

1 year ago

I'd be curious to see if there is a correlation between infant nourishment sources (breastmilk, formula) and allergy occurance.

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@kyrabarnes2249

1 year ago

I grew up playing in dirt, riding horses, had dog and cats, ran around in woods and fields... I have horrible allergies. My immune system is just super overreactive and I suffer when I try to do the things I love(allergic to hay, horses, dogs, cats, trees, flowers, grass, dust, etc). The main reaction I have is skin irritation and eczema, second is chronic congestion and sneezing

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@kentowakai1234

1 year ago

We've been told to not give honey to infants for the last few decades, but when we eat honey, our body tags food with IgA to mark it as not a threat. Local honey has local pollen that our bodies can then mark for us.

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@annej5699

1 year ago

Age late 50s here. I grew up in town (in IL) until age 12, then on the family farm (MN) after that. Rode my bike everywhere, including into town 6 miles away. My dad was an airline pilot and we flew places on Standby, so lots of time hanging around airports. Moved to CO and worked guest ranches to save for college. No allergies through all of that.

Moved from the cooler climates that got snow every year to SE TX (followed my eventual spouse), and have been fighting allergies ever since, ALL YEAR ROUND -- since 1997. That is, until I visit someplace cooler and drier again, upon which my allergies disappear (unless it's full bloom season in the desert, and then the allergies persist but are milder).

Exposure to things matters, but so does climate and total load. Down here I live in a climate I am not suited for and have struggled with for more than 20 years. I am besieged with many varieties of allergens year-round, so my system never gets a long enough break to process and build resistance. Now I have osteoarthritis, made worse by humidity (which we have in droves), the pain of which limits my ability to get out hiking to try to build more tolerance.

Our systems are complex. My spouse and kids (now grown) all have lots of allergies, and my kids grew up down here and have been exposed all their lives. Exposure to stuff matters, but isn't the only solution. Allergen variety and total load can over time beat a vigorous body. Additionally, the various bugs we can catch evolve over time, so the strains circulating now differ from the ones we grew up with. There is still benefit from exposure, but it's not absolute.

What works well for one individual might work poorly or not at all for another, even within the same family or household. What worked well for us in our youth might not work as well (or at all) for ourselves later in life.

It is a complex system of interactions, ever changing, between organisms that also are ever changing. It calls for patience, recognition that things change, and the willingness to accept and support our own selves as well as each other.

So let's keep learning, listening to each other, and supporting even when we don't understand, okay?

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@JonathonBarton

1 year ago

I don't think it's just childhood. I worked at a major international airport for around 12 years - and for 10 of them, part of my duties were to make the rounds through every concourse and terminal and check the functionality of the Flight Information Displays - twice a day. The last two, I'd moved to another role that spent MUCH less time in the public areas of the airport.
For a decade, I was rarely, hardly ever sick...during the last two years I definitely had more colds and those minor "man, I just feel kinda achy and run down today" illnesses.
My working hypothesis is that I was exposed on a daily basis to a very low level of...basically every global strain of every common disease that can be transmitted airborne...as they were brought to my work environment from travelers around the globe. We had direct flights to places as far away as KEF, CDG, LHR, and FRA, and TONS of connecting passengers arriving from Australia and Asia via LAX and SFO and SEA.

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@sal2.00

1 year ago

This is a very interesting hypothesis! I personally hope it doesnt hold up as it sets a very bleak future in my head where superbugs/bacteria rein supreme due to our weakened immune system! 😅

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@Andreamom001

8 months ago

Maybe a partial explanation, but my sis and I were raised the same, running around outside, playing in the mud, helping garden. She had terrible allergies as a kid (to a lot of stuff), and I didn’t.

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@PJBxx

1 year ago

Alternatively, improved sanitation, modern medicine, and better understanding of allergens could be why people with allergies just... die less. More alive people with allergies means more people making babies who are also more likely to have allergies. Early exposure to bacteria wouldn't solve this. In fact, there is no solution, it's just a thing that's gonna happen.

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@TomMcD71

1 year ago

Yeah I believe sanitizing everything is a bad thing also Merry Christmas to everyone

28 |

@D3M1N1

1 year ago

Personally I believe that the fact of antibiotic presence in everything is much of the reason for the explosions in Auto Immune Diseases as well.
The body gets "bored" and starts impacting itself,
Diabetes (Immune cells killing off islet cells) for example

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@jipillow1

7 months ago

I get exposed to the same pollen every spring and i still have the same reaction every year.

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@tlj1621

1 year ago

I have allergies! I’m allergic to indoor/outdoor allergens, animals, and food intolerances. I grew up in the country and was exposed to everything I am allergic to as a kid. Now that I’m an adult, still have the same allergies, I just know how to manage them.
If I get sick, I always think it’s allergies first.

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@adoxartist1258

8 months ago

I'm in my 50s. I grew up moving all over the eastern side of the country every other year, sometimes more frequently, constantly being exposed to each new region's favorite germs and allergens. We lived in poverty, our homes (and a few homeless situations but with a roof over our heads) were not wonderfully clean but they weren't horrific either. I, and one of my sisters, have chronic illnesses and year-round allergies. Our other sister has seasonal allergies and that's it. I think it's luck of the genetic draw combined with personal stresses or lack thereof that contribute to general health. I'm sure it's much more complicated but I think genetics and stresses are foundational to health or illness.

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@yvonnecrozier4536

1 year ago

Partially, but recent generations consumption of highly processed and sprayed food and excessive sugar has caused widespread gut disbiosis, leading to all kinds of health problems

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