Food Protein Allergy |
Food Chemical Intolerance |
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Definition |
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An immune reaction to a protein involving an IgE antibody response.
This happens when the immune system sees a foreign source of protein as
a threat, as it would to a pathogen during an infection. |
A non-immune, pharmacological reaction to food flavour chemicals caused
by an enzyme deficiency or an enzyme excess. Flavour chemicals can produce
an allergy-like effect by a variety of different methods, including leukotriene
production and histamine degranulation. |
Composition |
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Reactions occur to apparently healthy whole foods. |
Reactions occur to artificial chemicals and to apparently healthy whole
foods. |
Reactions are thought to occur to stereotypically neolithic foods but
in fact occur to both neolithic and palaeolithic foods. |
Reactions can occur to modern processed foods, and are thought to occur
to stereotypically palaeolithic foods, but in fact occur to both neolithic
and palaeolithic foods. |
Usually only one or two specific foods are involved at most, and wider
ranging reactions are limited to genus. |
A large range of foods are involved, are not limited by genus but to
common chemical components within the foods. |
Common allergens include cow's milk, eggs, soy, peanuts (legumes),
tree nuts, fish and shellfish and wheat. |
Common reactive chemicals include sulphites, MSG, aspartame, tartrazine
and sunset yellow, azo dyes, artificial and natural colourings and flavourings,
artificial antioxidants, benzoates, many other additives, salicylates
(aspirin compounds) and biogenic amines (biologically active neurotransmitters
or pseudo-neurotransmitters). |
Prevalence |
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Usually affects small children whose immune systems are underdeveloped.
Though many children "grow out of" allergies, they may last for life. |
Children are more vulnerable because they are smaller and reactions
are dose related. Women of child bearing age are vulnerable because of
the influence of female hormones. The elderly are vulnerable because ageing
livers and kidneys are less able to excrete chemicals from the body. |
Less than 1% of adults and less than 8% of children under three years
old are affected by classical IgE food allergies. |
According to research by the RPAH, food intolerance is extremely common.
The prevalence is unknown and varies depending on the chemical. Sulphite
intolerance affects around 70% of asthmatics (around 7% of the population).
Salicylate intolerance affects around 20% of asthmatics (around 2% of
the population). Food chemical intolerance is not limited to asthmatics
but occurs in relation to many other disorders. |
Common allergens vary the world over according to frequency in the
diet and the timing of their introduction into the diet of babies and
children; rice and buckwheat allergy are common problems in Japan, lentil
allergy is a common problem in the Mediterranean. Allergenicity is more
common in industrialised countries. This implies possible chemical, nutritional,
or lifestyle factors are involved. One theory called the "hygiene hypothesis"
regards the immune system as incorrectly primed by lack of exposure to
pathogens. However, children with food chemical intolerances are more
likely to develop allergies, implying that particular food chemicals may
prime the immune system for allergies. |
Common reactive chemicals are the same the world over; however, food
chemical intolerance is thought to be more common in industrialised countries.
Western diets are typically very high in food flavour chemicals compared
to other more traditional diets. Food chemical intolerance syndromes sometimes
develop after a period of emotional trauma or physical ill health, but
are often present from birth. |
Diagnosis |
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Family doctors are very familiar with this condition. |
Family doctors are often unfamiliar with this condition and may be
skeptical about its existence. |
Diagnosis is common. Allergies are often over-diagnosed in relation
to unexplained food reactions. Treatment is straightforward. |
Outside Australia diagnosis is rare and often misunderstood and misdiagnosed
as idiosyncratic food allergy. Outside of Australia, food chemical intolerance
is rarely treated correctly, even when diagnosed. |
Easy to identify and associate with a specific food. Allergy blood
testing is not usually necessary but can be helpful to provide final confirmation. |
Difficult to identify and associate with foods, no pattern may be apparent
until after the foods have been excluded for some time. Chronic consumption
of reactive chemicals leads to the presence of a chronic condition which
often appears to be unconnected to food. |
Fast reaction occurring within seconds or minutes of consumption of
an allergen. |
Reaction times vary and can be delayed, they can begin within a few
minutes, to a few hours, to a few days of repeated consumption, and can
last anywhere between a few hours, days, a week, or even up to a month. |
Reactions are specific and short-lived. |
Reactions are cumulative and dose related. |
Can be identified easily with laboratory blood tests for IgE antibodies. |
Can only be identified through a comprehensive elimination diet over
the course of 4-6 weeks. |
Treatment |
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Biological mechanisms are well understood and fairly simple. |
Biological mechanisms are less well understood and quite complex. |
Through strict avoidance of the foods involved. |
Through strict avoidance of the foods involved. |
Desensitisation through strict avoidance or through build-up exposures
reports mixed results, working in some cases and not in others. |
Desensitisation through strict avoidance reports mixed results, working
in some cases and not in others. Desensitisation through build-up exposures
usually does not work, but when it does work it must be maintained by
constant exposure or reactions will reoccur. |
Children often "grow out of" mild allergic reactions. Allergies can
cease with 3-6 months avoidance of the foods involved, but may be permanent,
especially when reactions are severe. |
Avoidance for at least six months followed by gentle reintroduction
increases tolerance in some, for others chemical intolerance may be permanent. |
Antihistamines can help with reactions. |
Antihistamines can help with some reactions but can also be problematic
in themselves. Bicarbonate or calcium carbonate can help with reactions. |
Symptoms |
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Symptoms are easy to spot and typical. |
Symptoms are variable and wide-ranging. Individuals do not necessarily
react the same way to the same food chemical. Individuals may react differently
to the same food chemical over the course of a lifetime. |
Symptoms usually include: itching of the lips, mouth and throat, watering
eyes, sneezing and contact rashes in and around the mouth. They may include
digestive disorders and can cause vomiting and diarrhoea, hives, eczema,
or bowel disorders. Allergic reactions do not affect the nervous system. |
Symptoms can include many of the symptoms of allergic reactions, such
as skin rashes, hives and urticaria. They can also cause headaches, asthma,
eczema, frequent colds, flu and ear infections, arthritic joint pain,
muscle pain, stomach aches, colic, bloating, IBS, GERD, and affect the
nervous system and brain, causing aggression, defiance, ADD, ADHD, autism,
PMT, depression, irritability, anxiety, panic attacks, forgetfulness,
restlessness, fatigue, brain fog, concentration problems, hypoglycaemia,
and many other symptoms. |
Possible danger of anaphylactic shock.
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Possible danger of anaphylactic shock, but via inducing an immune-mediated
allergy. Possible danger of Reye's syndrome. |