Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

A Bite From This Tick Will Force You To Give Up Certain Kinds Of Meat

The discovery of a new tick is making meat-lovers nervous. A bite from what's known as the Lone Star tick will make carnivores suddenly allergic to red meat consumption.

That's what happened to sophomore student Peter Coughlin when he woke up in the middle of the night covered in hives and felt body chills and strong fevers.


After keeping a dedicated food journal, he reached the conclusion that his violent episodes, including vomiting, was the result of eating pork. "I essentially spent a week proving my point," Coughlin says. "I'd eat a bunch of red meat, and go through a series of pretty severe reactions."


Doctors had difficulty in diagnosing his ailment due to delayed symptoms, but Coughlin took it upon himself to do some research.

He found his symptoms matched reports of the alpha-gal allergy, where much of the study for the condition took place in the Blue Ridge Mountains at the University of Virginia where he frequently hiked. It was evident he was bit by a Lone Star.



A report described the alpha-gal allergy as atypical from a standard hay-fever allergy. It was "a severe, delayed-reaction immune response, which means it hits hours after someone who suffers from the allergy eats meat," wrote Zoya Teirstein for the Grist.

The Lone Star epidemic is on the rise and spreading to other parts of the country as nasty ticks are currently in the process of coming out of hibernation.



The CDC said seven new tick-borne infections have been recorded since 2004, and scientists are faulting climate change.

Gary Hickling, the director of the University of Tennessee's Center for Wildlife Health, is terrified at the rate of new discoveries made every year.

The Lone Star population is expanding beyond the zones they're known to originate from.

When we start getting these warm seasons, high rainfall kind of years, that probably means that those 2,000 baby ticks do a lot better.


With global warming reducing the duration of colder climate allowing for the ticks to hibernate, there's more of an opportunity for infection.

All it takes is one bite for carnivores to develop a meat allergy that can last anywhere from a few months to a an entire lifetime.

The Grist outlined the alpha-gal's effect on the body according to what scientists believe happens after human's are bit by a Lone Star.

Alpha-gal is a sugar molecule found in nearly all mammals, except humans and a few other primates. A lone star carrying alpha-gal (or an alpha-gal-like substance) bites a person and spreads it to their blood through the tick's saliva. Then, the molecule essentially rewires the body's immune system, prompting it to produce an overload of alpha-gal antibodies.



Is it a conspiracy unleashed by vegans?



He's not going down without a fight. Nothing comes between this guy and his steak.


The lingering antibodies vary from person to person but it's possible that the alpha-gal can retreat entirely.

Two years after Peter Coughlin suffered alpha-gal symptoms, he's able to eat red meat again, though he arms himself with Benadryl as a precaution.



H/T - Grist, Twitter

More from Trending

Linda McMahon; a PSP console
Taylor Hill/WireImage; Koichi Kamoshida/Getty Images

Education Secretary Linda McMahon Gets Epically Schooled After Sharing Mind-Boggling Tweet About The PSP Console

Education Secretary and former WWE co-founder Linda McMahon was swiftly fact-checked after she posted an odd tweet about how the PlayStation Portable (PSP) console was "the beginning of life on the go."

One wonders why the Education Secretary would post something to mark the 21st anniversary of the system’s 2005 launch in the United States. At the time, the device received a mixed reception, with critics pointing to its underwhelming battery life and lackluster graphics.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @connortalkslol's TikTok video
@connortalkslol/TikTok

Guy Admits His Ignorance After Girlfriend Educates Him On What Really Happens During Menstruation—And He's Horrified

Women's health should be much more common knowledge than it is, but many subjects related to women—especially menstruation, pregnancy, and childbirth—are still considered pretty "taboo" subjects in public spaces, in shared educational spaces, and, of course, among men.

That's why there are so many men like TikToker @connortalkslol who only start finding out what menstruation really is and what the cycle entails when they go looking for the information themselves.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from Dr. Suneel Dhand, MD's TikTok video
@dr.suneel.dhand.md/TikTok

Doctor Shares Eerie Warning Why You Should Never Leave Your Loved Ones Alone In The Hospital—And Yikes

It's easy for us to assume that when we rush one of our loved ones to the doctor's office or the emergency room, that we have done our part and the doctors will take it from there.

But Dr. Suneel Dhand, MD, argued in a multi-part series on X that a person's role in their loved one's healthcare has only just begun when they walk through the hospital's doors, making them one of their loved one's most vital advocates.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @leathernecklilah's TikTok video
@leathernecklilah/TikTok

Fed-Up Woman Tearfully Asks For Advice After Neighbor Refuses To Stop Dog From Killing Her Chickens

Having a homestead isn't all cozy videos, cuddly chickens, and freshly baked bread. It comes with hard decisions about animal health and protection, even if that means discussing another animal's life.

Homesteader and TikToker @leathernecklilah had a positive relationship with her neighbor, who owned all of the land around her property, until her neighbor's dog started using her property as its own personal killing station.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @oujibug's TikTok video
@oujibug/TikTok

Woman Goes To ER With Leg Pain Only For Doctors To Wonder How She's Even Still Alive

Imagine not being able to sleep for several days because of terrible leg pain and finally deciding to finally go to the emergency room for help, only to discover that the leg pain was a sign of something much, much worse.

As she would detail in a later TikTok, TikToker @oujibug had been experiencing a series of symptoms that she ignored because of the costs she was afraid of accruing by seeing her doctor, including dehydration, frequent urination, skin irritation, dramatic weight loss, and eventually, her leg pain.

Keep ReadingShow less