FOOD ALLERGIES: ABOUT FOOD ALLERGIES
While an estimated 40 to 50 million Americans have allergies, only 1 percent
to 2 percent of all adults are allergic to foods or food additives. Eight
percent of children under age 6 have adverse reactions to ingested foods; only 2
percent to 5 percent have confirmed food allergies. The following information
addresses commonly asked questions regarding food allergy.
What Are Symptoms of Food Allergy?
Allergic reactions to foods typically begin within minutes to a few hours
after eating the offending food. The frequency and severity of symptoms vary
widely from one person to another. Mildly allergic persons may only suffer a
runny nose with sneezing, while highly allergic persons may experience severe
and life-threatening reactions, such as asthma or swelling of the tongue, lips
or throat.
The most common symptoms of food allergy involve the skin and intestines.
Skin rashes include hives and eczema. Intestinal symptoms typically include
vomiting, nausea, stomach cramps, indigestion and diarrhea. Other symptoms can
be asthma, with cough or wheezing; rhinitis, often including itchy, stuffy,
runny nose and sneezing; and rarely, anaphylaxis, a severe allergic reaction
that may be life threatening.
Because these symptoms can be caused by a number of different diseases other
than food allergy, your allergist-immunologist may want to examine you to rule
them out as the source of your problem.
What Causes my Symptoms?
A food allergy is the result of your body's immune system overreacting to
food proteins called allergens. Normally, your immune system and defense
mechanisms keep you healthy by fighting off infections and inactivating proteins
such as food allergens, which could potentially cause allergic reactions.
Therefore, the majority of people develop a tolerance to a wide variety of
different foods in their diet.
In the individual with food allergy, the immune system produces increased
amounts of immunoglobulin E antibody, or IgE. When these antibodies battle with
food allergens, histamine and other chemicals are released as part of the body's
immune reaction to these substances. These chemicals can cause blood vessels to
widen, smooth muscles to contract, and affected skin areas to become red, itchy
and swollen. These IgE antibodies can be found in different body tissues - skin,
intestines and lungs - where specific allergy symptoms, such as hives, vomiting,
diarrhea and wheezing are observed.
Not all adverse reactions to foods are due to allergy. Some reactions to
cow's milk, for example, are related to a deficiency of an enzyme (lactase) that
normally breaks down a sugar in milk (lactose). When individuals with lactase
deficiency drink cow's milk or eat other dairy products, they may experience
intestinal symptoms, including stomach cramping, gas and diarrhea. This is
sometimes misinterpreted as a food allergy.
Why Me? Why Have I Developed Food Allergy?
Heredity seems to be the prime reason some people have allergies and others
don't. If both your parents have allergies, you have approximately a 75 percent
chance of being allergic. If one parent is allergic, or you have relatives on
one side with allergies, you have a 30 percent to 40 percent chance of
developing some form of allergy. If neither parent has apparent allergy, the
chance is 10 percent to 15 percent.
Although food allergy occurs most often in infants and children, it can
appear at any age and can be caused by foods that had been previously eaten
without any problems. Finally, excessive exposure to a particular food may
affect the overall rate of allergy to that food, as testified to by the high
prevalence of fish allergy among Scandinavians and of rice allergy among the
Japanese.
Which Foods Are Most Likely To Cause Allergy?
Eggs, cows milk, peanuts, soy, wheat, tree nuts, fish and shellfish are the
most common foods causing allergic reactions, but almost any food has the
potential to trigger an allergy. Foods most likely to cause anaphylaxis are
peanuts, tree nuts and shellfish.
Keep in mind that, if you are allergic to a particular food, you might be
allergic to related foods. For example, a person allergic to walnuts may also be
allergic to pecans and persons allergic to shrimp may not tolerate crab and
lobster. Likewise, a person allergic to peanuts may not tolerate one or two
other members of the legume family, such as soy, peas or certain beans. Clinical
research of individuals with food allergy, however, has demonstrated that the
overwhelming majority of patients with food allergy are only allergic to one or
two different foods. Complete restriction of all foods in one botanical family
based on an allergy to one of its members is rarely necessary. Discuss these
issues with your allergist.
How Do Allergists Determine Which Foods Make Me Sick?
Some people know exactly what food causes their allergic symptoms. They eat
peanuts or a peanut-containing product and immediately break out with hives.
Other individuals need their allergist's help in determining the "culprit",
especially when the specific food cannot be identified or when the symptoms show
up many hours after ingesting an offending food.
Your allergist-immunologist will typically begin by taking a comprehensive
medical history. Specifically, you'll be asked about the symptoms you experience
following the food ingestion, how long after the food ingestion they occurred,
how much of the offending food was ingested, how often the reaction has occurred
and what type of medical treatment, if any, was required. Moreover, you will be
asked about your overall diet, your family's medical history and your home
environment.
These questions are necessary because your allergist wants to eliminate the
possibility that another problem or allergic condition may be causing or adding
to your symptoms. For example, a patient's allergy to inhalant pollen such as
ragweed may be related to allergic symptoms in the mouth and throat following
the ingestion of certain melons, such as watermelon, cantaloupe or honeydew.
What Is Allergy Testing?
You may be asked to undergo some allergy testing. Your allergist-immunologist
may employ skin testing, in which a diluted amount of the appropriate food
extract is placed on the skin and the skin is then lightly punctured. This
procedure is safe and generally not painful. Within 15 to 20 minutes, a positive
reaction typically appears as a raised bump surrounded by redness, similar to a
mosquito bite, and indicates the presence of allergic, or IgE, antibodies to the
particular food. In some cases, an allergy (IgE) blood test can be used to
provide similar information to that obtained by the skin test. The IgE blood
test is generally more expensive than skin testing and the results are usually
not available for one to two weeks.
If properly performed and interpreted, skin tests or IgE blood tests to foods
are reliable and good screening tests for food allergy. However, it's entirely
possible to test "allergic" to a food (by skin testing or IgE blood testing) and
yet have no symptoms when that food is eaten. Thus, confirmation requires
appropriately designed oral challenge testing with each suspected food.
How Do Special Diets Help Pinpoint the Problem?
With the information gained from your history, physical exam and testing,
your allergist may further narrow down the suspected foods by placing you on a
special diet. If your symptoms occur only occasionally, the culprit is likely a
food that is eaten infrequently. Your allergist-immunologist may ask you to keep
a daily food diary listing all food and medication ingested, along with your
symptoms for the day. By reviewing and comparing "good days" with "bad days",
you and your allergist may be able to determine which food is causing your
reaction.
If only one or two foods seem to be causing allergic reactions, it may be
necessary for the patient to go on a food elimination diet. The suspect food
must be completely eliminated in any form for a short time - one to two weeks.
If the allergic symptoms subside during abstinence and flare up when the food is
ingested again, the likelihood of identifying the problem food can be increased.
If several foods appear to cause problems and/or the diagnosis of food
allergy is equivocal, your allergist may want to confirm the role of each
suspected food by oral food challenge testing. Not all positive skin tests
and/or IgE blood tests equal a definite food allergy. With this in mind, food
challenges are the best way to determine whether or not a food allergy really
exists.
During an oral food challenge test the patient will eat or drink small
portions of a suspected food in gradually increasing portions over a given
period of time, usually under a physician's supervision, to see if an allergic
reaction occurs.
Once My Allergy Is Identified, How Is It Treated?
Once the diagnosis of food allergy is confirmed, the most effective treatment
is not eating the offending food in any form. Therefore, the patient must be
vigilant in checking ingredient labels of food products and learning other names
of identification of the responsible food or food additive to make sure it is
not present. When you eat in a restaurant, you must be particularly vigilant and
you should take emergency medicines with you if you have a history of severe
reactions. Waiters (and sometimes the kitchen chef) are not always aware of the
exact ingredients of each item on the restaurant's menu.
All patients with food allergies must make some changes in the foods they
eat. Special food-allergy cookbooks, patient support groups and registered
dietitians can provide valuable assistance regarding your diet. Your allergist
can direct you to these resources.
What if I Accidentally Eat a Food I'm Allergic to?
Individuals with food allergy should have a clearly defined plan of action
for handling situations in which they accidentally ingest a food allergen. Have
a list of symptoms and your doctor's instructions for treatment posted in a
prominent place in your kitchen. Oral antihistamines can be very useful in
treating many of the early symptoms of a mild allergic reaction to a food.
Persons with histories of severe reactions need to be instructed in when and
how to give themselves a shot of epinephrine (adrenaline) in the event of a
severe allergic reaction. This medication is available in easy-to-use injectable
devices and should be carried by persons with histories of severe allergic
reactions. You should be taken to the hospital or call 911 and arrange for
follow-up medical care for a severe reaction. Bracelets or necklaces may be worn
to quickly alert medical personnel or other caretakers about food allergies.
Will I Ever Be Able To Eat These Foods Again?
In some cases, particularly in children, strict adherence to an elimination
diet appears to promote the process of outgrowing a food allergy. For example,
the vast majority of patients with documented allergic reactions to eggs, cows
milk and soy eventually become tolerant to these foods. Allergies to peanuts,
tree nuts, fish and shellfish, however, typically last a lifetime and are not
outgrown. Overall, approximately one-third of children and adults will
eventually be free of their allergic reactions to foods after rigorously
following appropriate diets free of the offending food allergens.
After you have eliminated foods responsible for allergic reactions for a
period of at least six months, your allergist may recommend that you undergo an
oral food challenge under observation to reassess your symptoms. If you have no
reaction and can ingest a normally prepared portion of the food, you will be
able to safely reintroduce this food into your diet. If any symptoms of an
allergic reaction do occur, the dietary restriction will need to be continued.
If you have had a severe immediate-type allergic reaction to a certain food,
such as an anaphylactic reaction to peanuts, your allergist-immunologist may
recommend that you never again eat this food and rarely would a food challenge
be needed to confirm the history. Remember, in some very allergic persons a very
small quantity of an allergenic food can produce a life-threatening reaction.
Patients who use caution and carefully follow an allergist's advice can bring
food allergy under control. Please contact your allergist-immunologist with
further questions and concerns about food allergy.
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