Alcat test


The Alcat test (acronym for leukocyte cellular antibody test) is a laboratory test by which the diagnosis of food intolerance is performed. Medical science does not recognize the existence of these intolerances and considers such tests a scam.

The test involves contacting the patient's blood with a normal withdrawal with a variety of foods suspected to be intolerant. Reactions to intolerance are not always immediate, and may also occur several hours after the substance is injected, so the test would indicate an adverse reaction to food, that is, food allergens. Such allergens would induce changes in both the number and size of some of the patient's blood cells, in particular neutrophilic leukocytes (neutrophil granulocytes).

When that reaction occurs, it means that it is in the presence of an adverse reaction to the tested food. Notemodify wikitesto

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