Dr. MJ Bazos MD,
Patient Handout
Food
Allergy and Intolerances
Food allergies or food intolerances affect
nearly everyone at some point. People often have an unpleasant reaction to
something they ate and wonder if they have a food allergy. One out of three
people either say that they have a food allergy or that they modify the family
diet because a family member is suspected of having a food allergy. But only
about three percent of children have clinically proven allergic reactions to
foods. In adults, the prevalence of food allergy drops to about one percent of
the total population.
This difference
between the clinically proven prevalence of food allergy and the public
perception of the problem is in part due to reactions called "food intolerances"
rather than food allergies. A food allergy, or hypersensitivity, is an abnormal
response to a food that is triggered by the immune system. The immune system is
not responsible for the symptoms of a food intolerance, even though these
symptoms can resemble those of a food allergy.
It is extremely important for people
who have true food allergies to identify them and prevent allergic reactions to
food because these reactions can cause devastating illness and, in some cases,
be fatal.
How Allergic Reactions
Work
An allergic reaction involves two
features of the human immune response. One is the production of immunoglobulin E
(IgE), a type of protein called an antibody that circulates through the blood.
The other is the mast cell, a specific cell that occurs in all body tissues but
is especially common in areas of the body that are typical sites of allergic
reactions, including the nose and throat, lungs, skin, and gastrointestinal
tract.
The ability of a given
individual to form IgE against something as benign as food is an inherited
predisposition. Generally, such people come from families in which allergies are
common-not necessarily food allergies but perhaps hay fever, asthma, or hives.
Someone with two allergic parents is more likely to develop food allergies than
someone with one allergic parent.
Before
an allergic reaction can occur, a person who is predisposed to form IgE to foods
first has to be exposed to the food. As this food is digested, it triggers
certain cells to produce specific IgE in large amounts. The IgE is then released
and attaches to the surface of mast cells. The next time the person eats that
food, it interacts with specific IgE on the surface of the mast cells and
triggers the cells to release chemicals such as histamine. Depending upon the
tissue in which they are released, these chemicals will cause a person to have
various symptoms of food allergy. If the mast cells release chemicals in the
ears, nose, and throat, a person may feel an itching in the mouth and may have
trouble breathing or swallowing. If the affected mast cells are in the
gastrointestinal tract, the person may have abdominal pain or diarrhea. The
chemicals released by skin mast cells, in contrast, can prompt hives.
Food allergens (the food fragments
responsible for an allergic reaction) are proteins within the food that usually
are not broken down by the heat of cooking or by stomach acids or enzymes that
digest food. As a result, they survive to cross the gastrointestinal lining,
enter the bloodstream, and go to target organs, causing allergic reactions
throughout the body.
The complex
process of digestion affects the timing and the location of a reaction. If
people are allergic to a particular food, for example, they may first experience
itching in the mouth as they start to eat the food. After the food is digested
in the stomach, abdominal symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhea, or pain may
start. When the food allergens enter and travel through the bloodstream, they
can cause a drop in blood pressure. As the allergens reach the skin, they can
induce hives or eczema, or when they reach the lungs, they may cause asthma. All
of this takes place within a few minutes to an hour.
Common Food Allergies
In adults, the most common foods to
cause allergic reactions include: shellfish such as shrimp, crayfish, lobster,
and crab; peanuts, a legume that is one of the chief foods to cause severe
anaphylaxis, a sudden drop in blood pressure that can be fatal if not treated
quickly; tree nuts such as walnuts; fish; and eggs.
In children, the pattern is somewhat
different. The most common food allergens that cause problems in children are
eggs, milk, and peanuts. Adults usually do not lose their allergies, but
children can sometimes outgrow them. Children are more likely to outgrow
allergies to milk or soy than allergies to peanuts, fish, or shrimp.
The foods that adults or children react to
are those foods they eat often. In Japan, for example, rice allergy is more
frequent. In Scandinavia, codfish allergy is more common.
Cross Reactivity
If someone has a life-threatening
reaction to a certain food, the doctor will counsel the patient to avoid similar
foods that might trigger this reaction. For example, if someone has a history of
allergy to shrimp, testing will usually show that the person is not only
allergic to shrimp but also to crab, lobster, and crayfish as well. This is
called cross-reactivity.
Another
interesting example of cross-reactivity occurs in people who are highly
sensitive to ragweed. During ragweed pollination season, these people sometimes
find that when they try to eat melons, particularly cantaloupe, they have
itching in their mouth and they simply cannot eat the melon. Similarly, people
who have severe birch pollen allergy also may react to the peel of apples. This
is called the "oral allergy syndrome."
Differential Diagnoses
A differential diagnosis means
distinguishing food allergy from food intolerance or other illnesses. If a
patient goes to the doctor's office and says, "I think I have a food allergy,"
the doctor has to consider the list of other possibilities that may lead to
symptoms that could be confused with food allergy.
One possibility is the contamination of
foods with microorganisms, such as bacteria, and their products, such as toxins.
Contaminated meat sometimes mimics a food reaction when it is really a type of
food poisoning.
There are also natural
substances, such as histamine, that can occur in foods and stimulate a reaction
similar to an allergic reaction. For example, histamine can reach high levels in
cheese, some wines, and in certain kinds of fish, particularly tuna and
mackerel. In fish, histamine is believed to stem from bacterial contamination,
particularly in fish that hasn't been refrigerated properly. If someone eats one
of these foods with a high level of histamine, that person may have a reaction
that strongly resembles an allergic reaction to food. This reaction is called
histamine toxicity.
Another cause of food
intolerance that is often confused with a food allergy is lactase deficiency.
This most common food intolerance affects at least one out of ten people.
Lactase is an enzyme that is in the lining of the gut. This enzyme degrades
lactose, which is in milk. If a person does not have enough lactase, the body
cannot digest the lactose in most milk products. Instead, the lactose is used by
bacteria, gas is formed, and the person experiences bloating, abdominal pain,
and sometimes diarrhea. There are a couple of diagnostic tests in which the
patient ingests a specific amount of lactose and then the doctor measures the
body's response by analyzing a blood sample.
Another type of food intolerance is an
adverse reaction to certain products that are added to food to enhance taste,
provide color, or protect against the growth of microorganisms. Compounds that
are most frequently tied to adverse reactions that can be confused with food
allergy are yellow dye number 5, monosodium glutamate, and sulfites. Yellow dye
number 5 can cause hives, although rarely. Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is a
flavor enhancer, and, when consumed in large amounts, can cause flushing,
sensations of warmth, headache, facial pressure, chest pain, or feelings of
detachment in some people. These transient reactions occur rapidly after eating
large amounts of food to which MSG has been added.
Sulfites can occur naturally in foods or
are added to enhance crispness or prevent mold growth. Sulfites in high
concentrations sometimes pose problems for people with severe asthma. Sulfites
can give off a gas called sulfur dioxide, which the asthmatic inhales while
eating the sulfited food. This irritates the lungs and can send an asthmatic
into severe bronchospasm, a constriction of the lungs. Such reactions led the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ban sulfites as spray-on
preservatives in fresh fruits and vegetables. But they are still used in some
foods and are made naturally during the fermentation of wine, for example.
There are several other diseases that
share symptoms with food allergies including ulcers and cancers of the
gastrointestinal tract. These disorders can be associated with vomiting,
diarrhea, or cramping abdominal pain exacerbated by eating.
Gluten intolerance is
associated with the disease called gluten-sensitive enteropathy or celiac
disease. It is caused by an abnormal immune response to gluten, which is a
component of wheat and some other grains.
Some people may have a food intolerance
that has a psychological trigger. In selected cases, a careful psychiatric
evaluation may identify an unpleasant event in that person's life, often during
childhood, tied to eating a particular food. The eating of that food years
later, even as an adult, is associated with a rush of unpleasant sensations that
can resemble an allergic reaction to food.
Diagnosis
To diagnose food allergy a doctor must
first determine if the patient is having an adverse reaction to specific foods.
This assessment is made with the help of a detailed patient history, the
patient's diet diary, or an elimination diet.
The first of these techniques is the most
valuable. The physician sits down with the person suspected of having a food
allergy and takes a history to determine if the facts are consistent with a food
allergy. The doctor asks such questions as:
* What was the timing of the reaction? Did the
reaction come on quickly, usually within an hour after eating the food?
* Was allergy treatment successful?
(Antihistamines should relieve hives, for example, if they stem from a food
allergy.) Is the reaction always associated with a certain food?
* Did anyone else get sick? For example, if the
person has eaten fish contaminated with histamine, everyone who ate the fish
should be sick. In an allergic reaction, however, only the person allergic to
the fish becomes ill.
* How much did the patient eat before
experiencing a reaction? The severity of the patient's reaction is sometimes
related to the amount of food the patient ate.
* How was the food prepared? Some people will
have a violent allergic reaction only to raw or undercooked fish. Complete
cooking of the fish destroys those allergens in the fish to which they react. If
the fish is cooked thoroughly, they can eat it with no allergic reaction.
* Were other foods ingested at the same time of
the allergic reaction? Some foods may delay digestion and thus delay the onset
of the allergic reaction. Sometimes a
diagnosis cannot be made solely on the basis of history. In that case, the
doctor may ask the patient to go back and keep a record of the contents of each
meal and whether he or she had a reaction. This gives more detail from which the
doctor and the patient can determine if there is consistency in the reactions.
The next step some doctors use is an
elimination diet. Under the doctor's direction, the patient does not eat a food
suspected of causing the allergy, like eggs, and substitutes another food, in
this case, another source of protein. If the patient removes the food and the
symptoms go away, the doctor can almost always make a diagnosis. If the patient
then eats the food (under the doctor's direction) and the symptoms come back,
then the diagnosis is confirmed. This technique cannot be used, however, if the
reactions are severe (in which case the patient should not resume eating the
food) or infrequent. If the patient's
history, diet diary, or elimination diet suggests a specific food allergy is
likely, the doctor will then use tests that can more objectively measure an
allergic response to food. One of these is a scratch skin test, during which a
dilute extract of the food is placed on the skin of the forearm or back. This
portion of the skin is then scratched with a needle and observed for swelling or
redness that would indicate a local allergic reaction. If the scratch test is
positive, the patient has IgE on the skin's mast cells that is specific to the
food being tested. Skin tests
are rapid, simple, and relatively safe. But a patient can have a positive skin
test to a food allergen without experiencing allergic reactions to that food. A
doctor diagnoses a food allergy only when a patient has a positive skin test to
a specific allergen and the history of these reactions suggests an allergy to
the same food. In some extremely allergic
patients who have severe anaphylactic reactions, skin testing cannot be used
because it could evoke a dangerous reaction. Skin testing also cannot be done on
patients with extensive eczema. For these
patients a doctor may use blood tests such as the RAST and the ELISA. These
tests measure the presence of food-specific IgE in the blood of patients. These
tests may cost more than skin tests, and results are not available immediately.
As with skin testing, positive tests do not necessarily make the diagnosis.
The final method used to objectively
diagnose food allergy is double-blind food challenge. This testing has come to
be the "gold standard" of allergy testing. Various foods, some of which are
suspected of inducing an allergic reaction, are each placed in individual opaque
capsules. The patient is asked to swallow a capsule and is then watched to see
if a reaction occurs. This process is repeated until all the capsules have been
swallowed. In a true double-blind test, the doctor is also "blinded" (the
capsules having been made up by some other medical person) so that neither the
patient nor the doctor knows which capsule contains the allergen.
The advantage of such a challenge is that
if the patient has a reaction only to suspected foods and not to other foods
tested, it confirms the diagnosis. Someone with a history of severe reactions,
however, cannot be tested this way. In addition, this testing is expensive
because it takes a lot of time to perform and multiple food allergies are
difficult to evaluate with this procedure.
Consequently, double-blind food challenges
are done infrequently. This type of testing is most commonly used when the
doctor believes that the reaction a person is describing is not due to a
specific food and the doctor wishes to obtain evidence to support this judgment
so that additional efforts may be directed at finding the real cause of the
reaction. Exercise-Induced Food
Allergy At least one situation may
require more than the simple ingestion of a food allergen to provoke a reaction:
exercise-induced food allergy. People who experience this reaction eat a
specific food before exercising. As they exercise and their body temperature
goes up, they begin to itch, get light-headed, and soon have allergic reactions
such as hives or even anaphylaxis. The cure for exercised-induced food allergy
is simple-not eating for a couple of hours before exercising.
Treatment
Food allergy is treated by dietary
avoidance. Once a patient and the patient's doctor have identified the food to
which the patient is sensitive, the food must be removed from the patient's
diet. To do this, patients must read lengthy, detailed ingredient lists on each
food they are considering eating. Many allergy-producing foods such as peanuts,
eggs, and milk, appear in foods one normally would not associate them with.
Peanuts, for example, are often used as a protein source and eggs are used in
some salad dressings. The FDA requires ingredients in a food to appear on its
label. People can avoid most of the things to which they are sensitive if they
read food labels carefully and avoid restaurant-prepared foods that might have
ingredients to which they are allergic. In
highly allergic people even minuscule amounts of a food allergen (for example,
1/44,000 of a peanut kernel) can prompt an allergic reaction. Other less
sensitive people may be able to tolerate small amounts of a food to which they
are allergic. Patients with severe food
allergies must be prepared to treat an inadvertent exposure. Even people who
know a lot about what they are sensitive to occasionally make a mistake. To
protect themselves, people who have had anaphylactic reactions to a food should
wear medical alert bracelets or necklaces stating that they have a food allergy
and that they are subject to severe reactions. Such people should always carry a
syringe of adrenaline (epinephrine), obtained by prescription from their
doctors, and be prepared to self-administer it if they think they are getting a
food allergic reaction. They should then immediately seek medical help by either
calling the rescue squad or by having themselves transported to an emergency
room. Anaphylactic allergic reactions can be fatal even when they start off with
mild symptoms such as a tingling in the mouth and throat or gastrointestinal
discomfort. Special precautions are
warranted with children. Parents and caregivers must know how to protect
children from foods to which the children are allergic and how to manage the
children if they consume a food to which they are allergic, including the
administration of epinephrine. Schools must have plans in place to address any
emergency. There are several medications
that a patient can take to relieve food allergy symptoms that are not part of an
anaphylactic reaction. These include antihistamines to relieve gastrointestinal
symptoms, hives, or sneezing and a runny nose. Bronchodilators can relieve
asthma symptoms. These medications are taken after people have inadvertently
ingested a food to which they are allergic but are not effective in preventing
an allergic reaction when taken prior to eating the food. No medication in any
form can be taken before eating a certain food that will reliably prevent an
allergic reaction to that food. There are
a few non-approved treatments for food allergies. One involves injections
containing small quantities of the food extracts to which the patient is
allergic. These shots are given on a regular basis for a long period of time
with the aim of "desensitizing" the patient to the food allergen. Researchers
have not yet proven that allergy shots relieve food allergies.
Infants and Children
Milk and soy allergies are particularly
common in infants and young children. These allergies sometimes do not involve
hives and asthma, but rather lead to colic, and perhaps blood in the stool or
poor growth. Infants and children are thought to be particularly susceptible to
this allergic syndrome because of the immaturity of their immune and digestive
systems. Milk or soy allergies in infants can develop within days to months of
birth. Sometimes there is a family history of allergies or feeding problems. The
clinical picture is one of a very unhappy colicky child who may not sleep well
at night. The doctor diagnoses food allergy partly by changing the child's diet.
Rarely, food challenge is used. If the
baby is on cow's milk, the doctor may suggest a change to soy formula or
exclusive breast milk, if possible. If soy formula causes an allergic reaction,
the baby may be placed on an elemental formula. These formulas are processed
proteins (basically sugars and amino acids). There are few if any allergens
within these materials. The doctor will sometimes prescribe corticosteroids to
treat infants with severe food allergies. Fortunately, time usually heals this
particular gastrointestinal disease. It tends to resolve within the first few
years of life. Exclusive breast feeding
(excluding all other foods) of infants for the first 6 to 12 months of life is
often suggested to avoid milk or soy allergies from developing within that time
frame. Such breast feeding often allows parents to avoid infant-feeding
problems, especially if the parents are allergic (and the infant therefore is
likely to be allergic). There are some children who are so sensitive to a
certain food, however, that if the food is eaten by the mother, sufficient
quantities enter the breast milk to cause a food reaction in the child. Mothers
sometimes must themselves avoid eating those foods to which the baby is
allergic. There is no conclusive evidence
that breast feeding prevents the development of allergies later in life. It
does, however, delay the onset of food allergies by delaying the infant's
exposure to those foods that can prompt allergies, and it may avoid altogether
those feeding problems seen in infants. By delaying the introduction of solid
foods until the infant is 6 months old or older, parents can also prolong the
child's allergy-free period.
Controversial Issues
There are several disorders thought by
some to be caused by food allergies, but the evidence is currently insufficient
or contrary to such claims. It is controversial, for example, whether migraine
headaches can be caused by food allergies. There are studies showing that people
who are prone to migraines can have their headaches brought on by histamines and
other substances in foods. The more difficult issue is whether food allergies
actually cause migraines in such people. There is virtually no evidence that
most rheumatoid arthritis or osteoarthritis can be made worse by foods, despite
claims to the contrary. There is also no evidence that food allergies can cause
a disorder called the allergic tension fatigue syndrome, in which people are
tired, nervous, and may have problems concentrating, or have headaches.
Cerebral allergy is a term that has been
applied to people who have trouble concentrating and have headaches as well as
other complaints. This is sometimes attributed to mast cells degranulating in
the brain but no other place in the body. There is no evidence that such a
scenario can happen, and most doctors do not currently recognize cerebral
allergy as a disorder. Another
controversial topic is environmental illness. In a seemingly pristine
environment, some people have many non-specific complaints such as problems
concentrating or depression. Sometimes this is attributed to small amounts of
allergens or toxins in the environment. There is no evidence that such problems
are due to food allergies. Some people
believe hyperactivity in children is caused by food allergies. But researchers
have found that this behavioral disorder in children is only occasionally
associated with food additives, and then only when such additives are consumed
in large amounts. There is no evidence that a true food allergy can affect a
child's activity except for the proviso that if a child itches and sneezes and
wheezes a lot, the child may be miserable and therefore more difficult to guide.
Also, children who are on anti-allergy medicines that can cause drowsiness may
get sleepy in school or at home.
Controversial Diagnostic Techniques
One controversial diagnostic technique
is cytotoxicity testing, in which a food allergen is added to a patient's blood
sample. A technician then examines the sample under the microscope to see if
white cells in the blood "die." Scientists have evaluated this technique in
several studies and have not been found it to effectively diagnose food allergy.
Another controversial approach is called
sublingual or, if it is injected under the skin, subcutaneous provocative
challenge. In this procedure, dilute food allergen is administered under the
tongue of the person who may feel that his or her arthritis, for instance, is
due to foods. The technician then asks the patient if the food allergen has
aggravated the arthritis symptoms. In clinical studies, researchers have not
shown that this procedure can effectively diagnose food allergies.
An immune complex assay is sometimes
done on patients suspected of having food allergies to see if there are
complexes of certain antibodies bound to the food allergen in the bloodstream.
It is said that these immune complexes correlate with food allergies. But the
formation of such immune complexes is a normal offshoot of food digestion, and
everyone, if tested with a sensitive enough measurement, has them. To date, no
one has conclusively shown that this test correlates with allergies to foods.
Another test is the IgG subclass assay, which looks specifically for certain
kinds of IgG antibody. Again, there is no evidence that this diagnoses food
allergy. Controversial Treatments
Controversial treatments include
putting a dilute solution of a particular food under the tongue about a half
hour before the patient eats that food. This is an attempt to "neutralize" the
subsequent exposure to the food that the patient believes is harmful. As the
results of a carefully conducted clinical study show, this procedure is not
effective in preventing an allergic reaction.
Summary
Food allergies are caused by
immunologic reactions to foods. There actually are several discrete diseases
under this category, and a number of foods that can cause these problems.
After one suspects a food allergy, a
medical evaluation is the key to proper management. Treatment is basically
avoiding the food(s) after it is identified. People with food allergies should
become knowledgeable about allergies and how they are treated, and should work
with their physicians.
Websites:National
Jewish Medical and Research Center: http://www.njc.orgAmerican
Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology: http://www.aaaai.org/scripts/find-a-doc/main.aspU.S.
Food and Drug Administration Center for
Biologics Evaluation and Research http://www.fda.gov/cber/index.html
American Academy of Dermatology: http://www.aad.orgLACTOSE
INTOLERANCE and CELIAC SPRUE: http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/digest/pubs/lactose/lactose.htmhttp://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/digest/pubs/celiac/index.htmFOOD
CONTENTS: U.S. Department of Agriculture
Food and Nutrition Information Center http://www.nalusda.gov/fnic/index.html
RECIPES:
American Dietetic Association
http://www.eatright.orgFood
Allergy Network: http://www.foodallergy.org/American
College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology http://allergy.mcg.eduAsthma
and Allergy Foundation of America http://www.aafa.org