All posts tagged: allergens

Popular honey barbecue sauce recalled due to two undeclared allergens

Popular honey barbecue sauce recalled due to two undeclared allergens

Stay ahead of the curve with our weekly guide to the latest trends, fashion, relationships and more Stay ahead of the curve with our weekly guide to the latest trends, fashion, relationships and more Stay ahead of the curve with our weekly guide to the latest trends, fashion, relationships and more A popular honey barbecue sauce with a mustard base has been recalled because it contains two undeclared ingredients, posing a risk of allergic reaction. Savannah Bee Company, based in Georgia, is recalling its HONEY BBQ SAUCE- MUSTARD because it contains undeclared wheat and soy, according to a press release shared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Friday. Since the two ingredients were not listed on the label, people with an allergy to either wheat or soy potentially run the risk of a serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume the barbecue sauce. The recall was initiated after a customer notified Savannah Bee Company that the “Honey BBQ Sauce – Sweet” was mislabeled with a “Honey BBQ Sauce-Mustard” label. Investigation then discovered that …

New nasal vaccine protects lungs for months against viruses, bacteria, and allergens

New nasal vaccine protects lungs for months against viruses, bacteria, and allergens

A vaccine usually trains your immune system to recognize one target. Here, the target is basically “anything that doesn’t belong in the lungs.” That is the surprising promise behind a new mouse study from Stanford Medicine researchers and collaborators. The team reports an intranasal vaccine formula that protected mice for months against several respiratory viruses, two bacteria that often cause hospital infections, and even an allergen linked to asthma. The findings are published in Science. “I think what we have is a universal vaccine against diverse respiratory threats,” said Bali Pulendran, PhD, the Violetta L. Horton Professor II and a professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford. Haibo Zhang, PhD, a postdoctoral scholar in Pulendran’s lab, is the study’s lead author. Bali Pulendran, Violetta L. Horton Professor, Director, Institute for Immunity, Transplantation and Infection and Professor of Microbiology and Immunology. (CREDIT: Jim Gensheimer) A different bet than “match the antigen” For more than two centuries, vaccine design has leaned on one big idea: antigen specificity. You show the body a harmless version of a pathogen’s …