Apparently there are no known mechanisms by which vaccination in general might trigger autoimmune disorders, and statistically speaking, this is also not happening:
Thanks for the link. Unfortunately though I do not believe it is relevant to my question. Allergies are an immune system disorder, but they are not an auto immune system disorder (unless the human body has started producing pollen without my knowledge). The article does not mention allergies as far as I can tell (probably for this reason).
Allergies and auto-immune disorders are "expressions" of the same underlying process. Dysfunction in regulatory t cells, part of the adaptive immune system that "trains" the adaptive immune system on what to "attack".
Sure, in the same way that busses and porcupines are expressions of the same underlying process. There are also some key differences, or else we would expect a similar prevalence of autoimmune disease as allergies, no?
Allergies and Auto-immunity are both pathologies of the adaptive immune system "incorrectly" targeting things. Regulatory t cells, "tregs", modulate this.
My point is that while there may be some broad commonality (with physics being a hyperbolic commonality in the example I gave), this does not mean that there are no differences and that we can always infer information about one from information about the other (though in some cases we can).
BACH2 is one of the gene's being investigated for it's role in allergies & auto-immune disorders, and tregs, which is why I keep bringing them up on this thread.
I think what you are implying above is that we can take a study or survey about autoimmune disease and use it to make conclusions about allergies. All I am saying is that this does not logically follow, because the two are not the same and “allergy” is not a strict subclass of “autoimmune disease”. The specific details of the mechanism are not relevant to the logical point unless those details establish a subclass or identity relationship (which here they do not).
Ah sorry, from your quote I understood that you’re talking about actual autoimmune disorders:
> also enhance the learned immune response to other materials in the body around vaccination time, which results in an “allergy” to those other material(s).
I mean, those are literally “allergies” to materials in your body.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8402446/#:~:tex....
Except in very rare cases for two particular disorders for two particular vaccines respectively.