It depends on what type of allergy you have. If you have hay-fever it will most likely effect your eyes and give you a runny nose. If you have an allergy for nuts it usually effects your tongue and makes it swell up.
The way Allergies work can vary from person to person. Some people have skin reactions like bumps, rashes, and whelps. They can also make your nose, eyes, and throat itch. Sometimes a person's throat can swell and close shut. The eyes can do the same thing, swell shut. So, allergies can have effects on every party of the body, depending on what kind of allergy it is.
The skin patch test is done to test for allergies
Skin allergies or eczema and wheezing or asthma are closely connected. Food allergies are also part of the atopic picture.
It can have something, in it that you can be allergies to and it case skin allergies.
There are skin tests where they prick you with the allergen in small doses and see if your skin reacts and blood tests where blood is drawn from your arm and tested in a laboratory.
The skin and respiratory system, including the sinuses.
Wool allergies, flea allergies, food allergies, and skin allergies that can be genetic. (My CC has allergies.)
Yes, seasonal allergies are no different from 'normal' allergies.
No there is not a skin system in the human body.
The epidermal part of the body - is simply the skin - or epidermis !
Yes, the American Eskimo Dog is prone to skin allergies
organ
yes it is, its your largest organ in your body
If you have allergies, this can be a major problem. Even though dander is just simply, dead skin or dried saliva, the dead skin cell is just providing allergen easier access to your body, riding on the dead skin, it could easily get in to your circulatory system, and can cause your allergies to go out.