Clinician-guided immune pattern reports

When food, inflammation, andrecurring symptoms stopmaking sense.

When the reasons behind ongoing inflammation do not add up, food is often the clearest place to start. Allerim helps turn those patterns into a clearer view and next steps.

Start with testing when meals or one repeated exposure seem tied to symptoms. Choose a consult when your case is complex, you already have results, or you want help deciding where to begin.

Immune context
Editorial view

Immune Insight 01

Acute inflammation has a job.

01

Short-lived inflammatory signaling helps the body respond to threat, then should settle back down.

The real question is whether that signal resolves cleanly or keeps echoing after the trigger should have passed.

Why this matters

Useful protection is different from a signal that never fully resolves.

Signal sweep

Examples of patterns Allerim helps interpret

These snapshots show the kinds of symptom stories Allerim helps turn into clearer written findings.

These examples are illustrative, not diagnostic, and not every symptom cluster implies the same immune explanation.

In context
Recurring Headaches
Pattern snapshot
Likely start: Broader symptom report

Recurring Headaches

Head pain that shifts with food, timing, stress, or sleep.

What testing includes

Testing is useful on its own. Follow-up is added only when it helps.

The first testing purchase gives patients results, simple positive-finding context, and a written recommendation for the next useful option without turning every case into a bigger care plan.

Not bundled into current testing

  • Telehealth visits are not included in the current testing payment.
  • Living Food Plan activation, ongoing care, and sequential retesting are optional next steps.
  • Allermetrix lab analysis may be charged separately after successful analysis, as shown at checkout.

Selected testing path

Panel selection, order setup, at-home collection and shipping where applicable, and result delivery through the secure Allerim account.

Simple positive-finding explanation

A plain-language read on what came back positive and how those findings may fit the original symptom question.

Next-step recommendations

The report can recommend no bigger step, a Living Food Plan, broader testing, sequential retesting, or a telehealth visit when that is actually useful.

Why start with food

Food is often a practical first lens because it is repeated and trackable.

Meals are one of the most repeated exposures most people can actually trace. That makes food a practical first place to start sorting what feels consistent, what feels delayed, and what still needs broader review.

Why this matters

Repeated meals create repeated chances for a pattern to show itself. That makes food one practical place to start sorting what appears consistent, what appears delayed, and what may need broader review.

Repeated input

Food

Sleep
Stress
Load
Timing

Why this can help

Food is not presented as a simplistic answer. It is often a practical repeated signal to review first, while surrounding factors help explain why the same exposure can look different from week to week.

Reactions are not always immediate. Timing, repeated exposure, sleep, stress, exercise, alcohol, and inflammation can all change how the same food feels.

Starting with food does not mean food is the whole answer. It is simply one practical place to begin when the pattern still feels hard to read.

Allerim starts with the clearest first input, then adds broader context only when it changes the next step.

After you choose

The path stays narrow until broader context is actually useful.

Allerim keeps the first step practical: either collect the right testing context or use a clinician consult to decide what should be reviewed first.

Default posture

Start with the least broad step that can answer the first question. Add clinician guidance, broader review, or follow-through only when it changes the next decision.

Some people stop after the written review with optional follow-up only. Not every case turns into ongoing management.

Testing-first review

Common first step

Testing clarifies the most likely signal first

Best when food, alpha-gal, environment, timing, or one repeated exposure looks like the clearest starting question.

Usually starts with testing, results, and provider review.

Consult-first review

Use this when route choice is unclear

A clinician helps decide what should be reviewed first

Best when you already have results, the case is complex, or you want help choosing whether testing is the right next move.

Usually starts with a consult and provider-reviewed interpretation.

One practical rule

Start with testing when a repeated input looks plausible. Choose a consult when interpretation, route selection, or existing results are the real first problem.

What happens next

1. Choose

Choose testing directly, use guided intake, or talk with a clinician when the first move is unclear.

2. Pay

Pay the amount due today before the order moves forward.

3. Consent

Complete required testing information and consent.

4. Review

A provider reviews the order before fulfillment continues.

5. Process

Your kit ships or your sample is processed through the selected testing path.

6. Report

Results, positive-finding context, and a clinician-reviewed written report return to your Allerim account.

7. Follow-through

A Living Food Plan, broader testing, sequential three-month testing, or telehealth visit may be recommended later only when it would add clarity.

Keep it connected

Your report should make the next move clearer, not murkier.

Allerim works best when the report, clinician review, and follow-through stay connected in one place. The goal is a clearer first decision, not more noise or more steps than you need.

Plain-language report plus a next-step recommendation.
One secure place for your report, updates, and follow-through.
Added support only when the written review is not enough.

Allerim provides clinician-guided interpretation and workflow support. It does not replace emergency care or formal diagnosis.