So, I thought a short update would be in place.
I had the mouthpiece replated and since then the problems are gone.
Allergic reaction to specific mouthpiece
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- Mary Ann
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Re: Allergic reaction to specific mouthpiece
To answer your rant.....some of us after toxic mold exposure develop a true intolerance to gluten without being celiac. It is found in the extreme number of anti-gliaden antibodies in a blood test. However, if we eat gluten, we'd might as well be celiac because the consequences are obvious and unlpleasant. Where I run into a problem is with those who assume it ALWAYS is a fad diet, and will actually lie about the gluten content because they think you are some kind of hypochondriac. Unlike your bride, I can get away with very small amounts but I simply cannot eat a piece of bread, or a cookie, without dire consequences. Yet I am not celiac, and before the mold exposure I could eat anything. I could get into the whole thing of the medical community's complete lack of knowledge of the genetic inflammatory response to mold toxins, thinking that the only nefarious effects are allergies, but I would be even farther off topic.Doc wrote: ↑Mon Aug 30, 2021 8:31 am
Pardon the rant, Joe: It's like how a large part of the US population now arbitrarily decides, without medical diagnosis, they have a gluten allergy and want everything gluten-free. Sorry, Charlie... but most people's ""gluten intolerance" is just a need to be trendy, hip, in the know, popular, woke, be accepted, etc. Mindless herd members trying to belong and fit in. My bride has Celiac disease, but the trendies don't. She was diagnosed with it before it became trendy and popular to have a gluten allergy or intolerance. Dealing with REAL Celiac includes avoidance and maintenance, as there is no cure. There is no permanent fix.
Rant off (you started it!)
- bloke
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Re: Allergic reaction to specific mouthpiece
I’m glad the suggested tack worked out for you.
===============
I am holding steadfastly to the label I coined, “freak jury“, when referring to our collective advice/intelligence.
———————————
Is there any chance that the fairytale, “The Three Sillies“, could be rewritten as “The Fifteen Sillies”?
===============
I am holding steadfastly to the label I coined, “freak jury“, when referring to our collective advice/intelligence.
———————————
Is there any chance that the fairytale, “The Three Sillies“, could be rewritten as “The Fifteen Sillies”?
Re: Allergic reaction to specific mouthpiece
This is exactly why I play stainless mouthpieces.
Terry Stryker
Mirafone 186C, 186BBb, 184C, 186C clone
Gebr. Alexander New 163C, Vintage 163C, Vintage 163BBb
Amati 481C
Lyon & Healy 6/4
Kane Stealth tuba
A plethora of others....
Mirafone 186C, 186BBb, 184C, 186C clone
Gebr. Alexander New 163C, Vintage 163C, Vintage 163BBb
Amati 481C
Lyon & Healy 6/4
Kane Stealth tuba
A plethora of others....
- Doc
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Re: Allergic reaction to specific mouthpiece
I take no issue with that. You are not talking about being gluten intolerant because it’s “trendy” or “hip.”Mary Ann wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 3:09 pmTo answer your rant.....some of us after toxic mold exposure develop a true intolerance to gluten without being celiac. It is found in the extreme number of anti-gliaden antibodies in a blood test. However, if we eat gluten, we'd might as well be celiac because the consequences are obvious and unlpleasant. Where I run into a problem is with those who assume it ALWAYS is a fad diet, and will actually lie about the gluten content because they think you are some kind of hypochondriac. Unlike your bride, I can get away with very small amounts but I simply cannot eat a piece of bread, or a cookie, without dire consequences. Yet I am not celiac, and before the mold exposure I could eat anything. I could get into the whole thing of the medical community's complete lack of knowledge of the genetic inflammatory response to mold toxins, thinking that the only nefarious effects are allergies, but I would be even farther off topic.Doc wrote: ↑Mon Aug 30, 2021 8:31 am
Pardon the rant, Joe: It's like how a large part of the US population now arbitrarily decides, without medical diagnosis, they have a gluten allergy and want everything gluten-free. Sorry, Charlie... but most people's ""gluten intolerance" is just a need to be trendy, hip, in the know, popular, woke, be accepted, etc. Mindless herd members trying to belong and fit in. My bride has Celiac disease, but the trendies don't. She was diagnosed with it before it became trendy and popular to have a gluten allergy or intolerance. Dealing with REAL Celiac includes avoidance and maintenance, as there is no cure. There is no permanent fix.
Rant off (you started it!)
Allergies and inflammatory conditions are real things. Bandwagon “conditions” are not.
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- KingTuba1241X (Tue Feb 01, 2022 6:12 pm)
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Re: Allergic reaction to specific mouthpiece
Same here, when I was living in Texas years ago...my shower stall collapsed in and revealed a mold layer thicker than Elvis's pompidore. Not too long after that I had serious issue with gluten..among all my other allergic reactions to things like polish.Mary Ann wrote: ↑Tue Feb 01, 2022 3:09 pmTo answer your rant.....some of us after toxic mold exposure develop a true intolerance to gluten without being celiac. It is found in the extreme number of anti-gliaden antibodies in a blood test. However, if we eat gluten, we'd might as well be celiac because the consequences are obvious and unlpleasant. Where I run into a problem is with those who assume it ALWAYS is a fad diet, and will actually lie about the gluten content because they think you are some kind of hypochondriac. Unlike your bride, I can get away with very small amounts but I simply cannot eat a piece of bread, or a cookie, without dire consequences. Yet I am not celiac, and before the mold exposure I could eat anything. I could get into the whole thing of the medical community's complete lack of knowledge of the genetic inflammatory response to mold toxins, thinking that the only nefarious effects are allergies, but I would be even farther off topic.Doc wrote: ↑Mon Aug 30, 2021 8:31 am
Pardon the rant, Joe: It's like how a large part of the US population now arbitrarily decides, without medical diagnosis, they have a gluten allergy and want everything gluten-free. Sorry, Charlie... but most people's ""gluten intolerance" is just a need to be trendy, hip, in the know, popular, woke, be accepted, etc. Mindless herd members trying to belong and fit in. My bride has Celiac disease, but the trendies don't. She was diagnosed with it before it became trendy and popular to have a gluten allergy or intolerance. Dealing with REAL Celiac includes avoidance and maintenance, as there is no cure. There is no permanent fix.
Rant off (you started it!)
06' Miraphone 187-4U