How Allergies Develop: Why Your Immune System Sometimes Overreacts


Dear health-conscious friends,

Have you ever wondered why one person can cuddle a cat without any problems while another starts sneezing within minutes? Or why some people can eat peanuts safely while others experience a life-threatening reaction?

The answer lies in the fascinating—and sometimes misguided—workings of the immune system.

What Is an Allergy?

An allergy occurs when your immune system mistakes a harmless substance for a dangerous invader.

Normally, your immune system protects you from bacteria, viruses, and parasites. But in people with allergies, everyday substances such as pollen, dust mites, pet dander, certain foods, insect venom, or medications are incorrectly identified as threats. These harmless substances are called allergens.

The Two-Step Process

Step 1: Sensitisation

The first time you're exposed to an allergen, you usually don't develop symptoms.

Instead, your immune system creates a special type of antibody called IgE (immunoglobulin E). These IgE antibodies attach themselves to immune cells known as mast cells and basophils, which are found throughout the skin, airways, nose, and digestive tract.

At this point, you've become sensitised.

Step 2: The Allergic Reaction

The next time you encounter the same allergen, it binds to the IgE antibodies sitting on mast cells.

This triggers the cells to release powerful chemicals, including:

  • Histamine
  • Leukotrienes
  • Prostaglandins
  • Cytokines

These chemicals cause the familiar symptoms of allergies:

  • Sneezing
  • Itchy eyes
  • Runny nose
  • Skin rashes
  • Hives
  • Wheezing
  • Swelling
  • In severe cases, anaphylaxis

Interestingly, these symptoms are not caused by the allergen itself—but by your own immune system's response.

Why Do Some People Get Allergies?

There's no single cause, but several factors increase the risk.

Genetics

Allergies often run in families. If one parent has allergies, the risk for their children increases. If both parents are allergic, the likelihood is even higher.

Environment

Modern lifestyles may contribute.

Children raised in very clean environments may have less exposure to microbes during early life. According to the hygiene hypothesis, this reduced exposure may make the immune system more likely to react to harmless substances later on.

Other environmental factors include:

  • Air pollution
  • Cigarette smoke
  • Changes in diet
  • Reduced exposure to nature
  • Climate change, which is lengthening pollen seasons in many regions

Why Can Allergies Develop Later in Life?

Many people assume allergies only appear during childhood, but adults can develop new allergies at any age.

Possible reasons include:

  • Repeated exposure over many years
  • Hormonal changes
  • Moving to a different climate or country
  • Viral infections that alter immune responses
  • Changes in the gut microbiome

Food Allergies vs Food Intolerances

People often confuse these two conditions.

A food allergy involves the immune system and can potentially cause life-threatening reactions.

A food intolerance does not involve the immune system. Instead, it usually results from difficulty digesting certain foods—for example, lactose intolerance due to reduced lactase enzyme.

While intolerances can be uncomfortable, they generally do not cause anaphylaxis.

Can Allergies Be Prevented?

There is no guaranteed way to prevent allergies, but research suggests that certain strategies may help reduce the risk.

Current evidence supports:

  • Avoiding smoking during pregnancy and around children
  • Breastfeeding where possible
  • Introducing common allergenic foods (such as peanuts and eggs) during infancy when appropriate and according to current medical guidance
  • Maintaining a healthy, diverse diet
  • Spending time outdoors and encouraging normal environmental exposure during childhood

How Are Allergies Treated?

Treatment depends on the type and severity of the allergy.

Options include:

  • Avoiding known allergens
  • Antihistamines
  • Steroid nasal sprays
  • Asthma inhalers when needed
  • Adrenaline (epinephrine) auto-injectors for people at risk of anaphylaxis
  • Allergen immunotherapy ("allergy shots" or tablets), which gradually retrains the immune system to become less reactive over several years

The Bottom Line

Allergies develop when the immune system mistakenly labels a harmless substance as dangerous. After becoming sensitised, future exposure triggers the release of histamine and other inflammatory chemicals, producing symptoms that range from mild sneezing to severe allergic reactions.

Although allergies can't always be prevented, modern treatments are highly effective, and for some people, immunotherapy can significantly reduce symptoms—or even change the course of the disease.

Understanding how allergies develop is the first step toward managing them safely and effectively.

This article is for educational purposes only and should not replace personalised medical advice. If you experience difficulty breathing, swelling of the face or throat, or signs of anaphylaxis, seek emergency medical care immediately.


AskADoc Weekly: Clear medical insights without the jargon.


Want more content like this? Check out our Youtube channel Askadoc!

Stay healthy!


👩‍⚕️ Dr. Joanna
AskADoc4Advice — where medicine meets curiosity (and a little bit of weird).

And be sure to check out Dr. Jill's and Lila Marsh's websites below for similar medical content for a healthier lifestyle!

DrJillFandrich.com

DrJillFandrich.com

Clinical insight for the symptoms, patterns, and questions no one is fully answering.

When something feels off—there's a reason. I help you identify it, clear mental fog, and reconnect missing pieces across health, mindset, and life so you can move forward with clarity and confidence. I am an author, natural health pharmacist, personal development expert, and business & entrepreneurship specialist. I guide you in uncovering root causes, lifting mental fog, making healthier lifestyle choices, finding what's been missing, viewing things from a 'wider lens,' and expanding your perspectives.

Lila Marsh

Lila Marsh

I'm a author who loves to talk about health & wellness, fashion & beauty, and fiction. Subscribe to my newsletter.

Joanna Monigatti

Hi, I am Dr. Joanna Monigatti. From the world of AskADoc and StoryPlanet. Because sometimes the truth about the human body is stranger than fiction. Ever wondered what’s weirder — real medicine or science fiction? Join me for a weekly adventure through medical mysteries, bizarre biology, and the sci-fi ideas that might not be fiction for long. Smart, funny, a little dark — and always true (mostly).Welcome aboard AskADoc / StoryPlanet.

Read more from Joanna Monigatti
Storyplanet african folktales and sci-fi

Dear gorgeous readers, Imagine you're driving home late at night when your self-driving car suddenly has to make an impossible choice. A child runs into the road. Swerving could send the car into a wall. Braking may not be enough. Who makes that decision? You—or the artificial intelligence behind the wheel? It's no longer science fiction. AI already helps doctors diagnose disease, flies military drones, predicts crimes, manages power grids, and increasingly makes decisions that affect...

Askadoc weekly newsletter

Dear health-conscious friends, When most people think of ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder), they picture a young boy who can't sit still in class. But ADHD doesn't disappear when childhood ends. In fact, many adults are diagnosed for the first time in their 30s, 40s, or even later in life after years of wondering why everyday tasks feel so difficult. Understanding the signs of adult ADHD can be life-changing. 1. You struggle to stay organised Do you constantly misplace your...

Storyplanet african folktales and sci-fi

Dear gorgeous readers, Every great science fiction story has one invention that makes readers stop and think. In Attack on Planet Falrus, that invention is Line Desimak. At first glance, it seems like just another futuristic technology. But Line Desimak was never meant to be magic. It was designed around a simple scientific question: What if we could control gravity as easily as we control electricity today? Gravity is the weakest of the four known fundamental forces, yet it governs...