Key Takeaways
Researchers have discovered that a 47-year-old man died after a severe reaction linked to alpha-gal meat allergy
The allergy is triggered by bites from the Lone Star tick
Blood tests showed he had a life-threatening allergic reaction
FRIDAY, Nov. 14, 2025 (HealthDay News) — A rare tick-spread “meat allergy” has now been tied to its first confirmed death, according to researchers at the University of Virginia School of Medicine (UVA).
Doctors reported that a healthy 47-year-old New Jersey man died in 2024 after eating beef, with symptoms starting four hours after his meal.
The cause of death was unclear until UVA allergist Dr. Thomas Platts-Mills , who first discovered the condition, reviewed blood samples and confirmed the man had a severe reaction linked to alpha-gal

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