What
is food allergy, and what is food intolerance? How do the
two differ? The best way to answer this question is to tell
the stories of Jane and Susan.
Jane's
Story
Jane's
health problems began as a baby. She had colic and vomited
often, and at the age of three months developed eczema on
her face and arms. Her mother had hay fever every summer,
and her father had suffered from asthma as a child
both complaints are common allergies. Even before Jane was
born, their family dr was well aware that they were an atopic
family in other words, they were prone to allergies.
As Jane grew older she developed asthma and hay fever, although
only mildly. Her asthma seemed to get worse when there was
a cat in the room. Using extracts of grass pollen and cat
dander, and inserting minute amounts of them under her skin
(a skin-prick test), the dr found that she was indeed allergic
to both these substances her arm had a red, itchy
bump where the extract had entered the skin.
Once or twice during her early years Jane's mouth and tongue
swelled up enormously after eating, and she had to be rushed
to the hospital. After thinking carefully about what she
had eaten on these occasions, Jane's mother concluded that
it was peanuts that had caused this alarming reaction. The
dr used skin-prick tests again, and they confirmed that
Jane had a food allergy she was extremely sensitive
to peanuts. Other skin-prick tests were negative, so it
seemed that she could eat most foods safely.
Even though Jane avoided peanuts carefully from then on,
there were occasional problems. One day when Jane was about
eight and her parents were holding a party, she handed a
bowl of nuts around to the guests. Later she rubbed her
eyelids, and they soon began to swell and itch furiously.
Although her hay fever and asthma subsided as Jane grew
older, her sensitivity to peanuts remained the same.
As an adult, Jane had a successful career that involved
a great deal of traveling and eating out. Wherever she ate
she had to be careful to avoid anything with peanuts
even the slightest trace of them. All was well until Jane,
by now in her thirties, ordered some cheesecake in a restaurant.
She had asked the waiter if the brown powder on the surface
of the cheesecake contained any nuts, and he assured her
that it was pure chocolate. Usually it wasbut the
chef had run out of chocolate that day and been forced to
use something else. Unfortunately for Jane, that something
else was finely grated nuts, including some peanuts.
Within seconds of taking her first mouthful of cheesecake,
Jane's mouth was itching. Her tongue began to swell, and
her breathing became difficult. She could no longer speak,
and, as the swelling blocked her windpipe, she began to
turn blue. Within minutes she had collapsed on the floor.
The colleagues she was dining with were horrified and had
no idea what to do, but a stranger at the next table intervened.
By an extraordinary, and lucky, chance, he was a dr. Grabbing
a spoon from the table, he pushed the handle over the back
other tongue and managed to open up the blocked windpipe.
As he did so Jane gradually turned from blue to pink, but
she was still in a state of collapse (known as anaphylactic
shock), and her face was still horribly swollen. Meanwhile,
someone had telephoned the hospital, and another dr arrived
with the life-saving medicines that Jane needed. When these
were injected, she slowly regained consciousness.
Thereafter, Jane was even more careful about avoiding peanuts
in her food. She realized that she could easily have died
had it not been for the presence of a dr. By scrupulously
avoiding peanuts, though, she has remained well. She also
carries an emergency kit with a syringe of epinephrine that
can be used to treat such attacks should she ever eat peanut
by accident again.
Susan's
Story
Susan is about the same age as Jane. She was reasonably
well as a child, apart from frequent colds and chest infections.
At the age of twenty-one, however, she suffered a bad bout
of diarrhea when traveling abroad. Although she recovered
from this, her bowels never really returned to normal: A
mild form of diarrhea stayed with her so that she needed
to go several times a day, often at the most inconvenient
moment. As the years passed this problem gradually worsened,
and unpleasant pains began in the lower part of her stomach.
When she finally consulted her dr about this problem, she
was told that it was irritable bowel syndrome, or IBS,
and that she should try to relax more.
For many years Susan also suffered headaches, but thought
little of them she simply took aspirin when she felt
one coming on. One day, just after her twenty-eighth birthday,
she experienced a strange sort of headache that was on the
left side of her head only. She took some aspirin, but the
pain did not go away indeed, it became more intense,
and she began to feel slightly sick. Eventually she had
to draw the curtains and go to bed because she could not
bear the light. There were more of these attacks over the
next few months and Susan went to see her dr again. He told
her that these were migraines, and again recommended that
she should try to worry less and learn to relax. Although
she followed his suggestions, the migraines continued, and
so did her bowel problems.
Over the next few years Susan had to give up alcohol and
chocolate, as these always seemed to bring the migraine
attacks on. But despite avoiding these items, her migraines
continued to become more frequent. She also felt excessively
tired, especially first thing in the morning, and she sometimes
felt lightheaded and confused, or very edgy and irritable.
To add to these problems, she began to get odd little pains
in her knees. These gradually grew worse, and by the time
she was thirty-four she could no longer run up the stairs
without pain; she was forced to give up jogging and riding
a bicycle, too, because these activities made her knees
so much worse. The pains spread to some of her other joints
and she began to feel that there was something seriously
wrong, because she was ill most of the time.
Susan had previously accepted her dr's diagnosis that most
of her problems were due to her "nerves," but
at this point she began to have doubts. She was now married,
and had a good job that she enjoyed. Apart from her health
problems she had few worries indeed she felt more
settled and happy than at any time in her life so
why was her health getting worse instead of better? She
went to see her dr again, and he gave her a thorough examination
but could find nothing wrong. He repeated his earlier diagnosis,
and suggested that her joint pains were also psychosomatic.
A few months later Susan read a magazine article about something
called "food allergy," which seemed to cause the
sort of symptoms she had. She asked her dr's opinion about
this and found he was very dismissive of the idea
as far as he could see, her symptoms were nothing like those
of food allergy. Another year went past, in which Susan
became steadily worse. Then a new dr joined the practice,
and when she next called for an appointment, it was suggested
that she see him instead, as he had a special interest in
patients like herself. When Susan went to see the new dr,
he explained that symptoms such as hers could sometimes
be caused by food, although there were other potential causes
as well. He went on to explain why his colleague had dismissed
the idea other having food allergy the condition
he treated was quite different, and he preferred to use
the name food intolerance. While he could not guarantee
that this was her problem, it was certainly a possibility.
He suggested that she try a special diet that avoided all
the foods she normally ate. Susan began the diet on a Monday
with high hopes, but by Tuesday she felt very ill indeed.
Her tiredness was far worse, and she experienced a severe
migraine attack the worst one she had ever suffered
that lasted through Wednesday as well. On Thursday
she felt completely washed out from the migraine, and Friday
was little better. In desperation, she rang the dr, but
he told her that this sort of reaction often occurred
in fact it was a positive sign that foods were the source
of the problem, so she should persevere with the diet.
On Saturday Susan woke up quite early, before her alarm
clock went off which was most unusual, because she
normally had great difficulty waking up. As she got out
of bed, she noticed that her knees did not give their customary
painful twinge. She tried walking downstairs and then running
up them again. To her amazement, she found that the pains
she had endured for two years had suddenly vanished.
As the day went on she realized that she felt altogether
different she was no longer tired, her head felt
clearer, and there was no headache or migraine, unlike most
weekends. Indeed, she felt better than she had for many
years. Over the next few days it became obvious that her
bowels were also a great deal better. When she returned
to the dr, Susan was jubilant she simply couldn't
believe how much better she felt. Even her irritability,
which she had thought was just part of her personality,
had now vanished. The dr explained that she must now reintroduce
foods, one at a time, to see what effect they had. Over
the next two months, she tried out all the foods she normally
ate. Some of these had no effect, but others made her very
ill milk, wheat, rye, barley, yeast, oranges, lemons,
beef, and tomatoes were the main culprits. By avoiding all
these foods, and adding some other, more unusual foods into
her diet instead, Susan remained well. Migraines, which
had previously afflicted her once or twice a week, were
now a thing of the past.
After eight months, the dr suggested that she try out some
of the incriminated foods, to see what effect they had.
She found that she still reacted to milk, but was fine on
the other foods. The dr advised her not to eat them more
than once every four days. A year later Susan discovered
that she could now drink milk again without ill effects.
Interestingly, she discovered that she could also drink
alcohol, in moderation, and cat chocolate, as they no longer
seemed to trigger migraines. By this stage she had begun
to forget what a migraine felt like!
Allergy
and Intolerance
Both Jane and Susan were clearly being made ill by the food
they ate. But their symptoms were very different
and so was the treatment they received from the medical
profession. Food allergy which caused Jane's dramatic
illness is a recognized complaint whose underlying
mechanism is fairly well understood. Food intolerance, on
the other hand, is not regarded as a sound diagnosis by
the majority of drs. Most would agree that there is such
a thing as food intolerance (although they might use a different
name for it), but they would argue that it affects relatively
few people. Like Susan's dr, they would regard the majority
of patients with vague, multiple symptoms, including headache
or migraine, fatigue, and diarrhea, as suffering from emotional
and mental problems that express themselves in ill health.
This book deals with both food allergy (Jane's problem)
and food intolerance (Susan's problem), but it concentrates
most attention on food intolerance, since this is the area
that has been sadly neglected by conventional medicine.
(The reasons for this neglect, and for the continuing controversy
over food intolerance, will be examined later, in chapter
6.)
...
Food
Intolerance
Jane could fairly be described as a typical case of food
allergy. But Susan is not a typical case of food intolerance,
because there is no such thing. Food Intolerance cannot
lay claim to any single set of symptoms. Every patient is
different, both in the cluster of symptoms displayed and
in the foods that cause these symptoms. Nor is there a single,
clear-cut mechanism underlying the symptoms, as there is
with food allergy. The available evidence indicates that
there may be half a dozen or more different factors that
contribute to the illness. In other words, food intolerance
is a complex subject, and few generalizations can be made.
Nevertheless, there are certain features that characterize
this type of food sensitivity and distinguish it from food
allergy. Whereas food-allergy reactions are usually immediate,
food-intolerance reactions tend to be much slower. The culprits
in food intolerance are foods that are eaten very regularly,
especially items such as wheat and milk that are consumed
at almost every meal. The slowness of the reaction, combined
with the fact that the foods are eaten so often, contributes
to the masking effect observed by the first drs to study
these reactionsthe link between food and symptoms
is unlikely to be made when the body is subjected to a constant
bombardment with the food.
Whereas food-allergy reactions can be provoked by quite
small amounts of the food a smear of the food from
a badly washed saucepan for some highly allergic individuals
much larger quantities are needed to provoke the
symptoms of food intolerance. Food intolerance is also far
more insidious than food allergy: it is often difficult
to say when it began, because the symptoms are very mild
at first but gradually get worse. There are exceptions to
this rule however, for in some cases a bad bout of influenza
or diarrhea can spark food intolerance. As in Susan's case,
those with food intolerance tend to collect more and more
new symptoms as the years go by, and become intolerant of
more and more foods.
Main
symptoms of food intolerance
Food
allergy at least in adults and older children
usually persists for many years, often for a lifetime, even
though the food is scrupulously avoided. Food intolerance,
on the other hand, may well disappear if the food is not
eaten for a few months. But it will tend to recur if the
food is ever eaten regularly again.
The symptoms of food intolerance are extraordinarily varied
and affect almost every body system. The illustration above
summarizes the major symptoms that are generally agreed
upon. Most drs working in this field would probably wish
to add various other symptoms to this list, and there is
intense debate over symptoms that might or might not be
attributed to food. Some of these controversial areas are
considered in chapter 7, where the symptoms of food intolerance
are described in more detail.
An important aspect of food intolerance is that the symptoms
are not constant they tend to come and go and to
vary in severity. Nonfood factors may play an important
part, particularly stress, which can greatly exacerbate
the symptoms. One of the most curious facets of food intolerance
is that the person concerned often has a craving for the
particular food or foods that cause the problem. In such
cases which account for as many as 50 percent of
food-intolerant patients eating the food initially
gives a sense of great well-being. A possible explanation
for this bizarre feature of the disease has now been discovered
and is described in chapter 12.
...
Food
for Thought
All of us, patients and drs alike, are conditioned to think
about food and other aspects of our environment in a particular
way. As civilized inhabitants of temperate climes, we can
indulge in the luxury of regarding nature as safe and welcoming,
and of thinking of food as entirely wholesome and beneficial.
These attitudes are part of our culture, another luxury
that we simply take for granted, such as armchairs or automobiles.
If we are to understand food intolerance, some of these
accepted ideas need to be challenged.
Much of the medical prejudice against food intolerance is
rooted in the idea that food as long as it is part
of a balanced diet cannot be bad for you. What is
often forgotten is that our foods were not designed specifically
for human consumption, but were drawn from a pool of wild
plants and animals that were domesticated by the first farmers.
In the wild, most food items are reluctant food items. They
do not want to be eaten, and their efforts to stay off the
menu are part of what Charles Darwin called the "struggle
for existence." Most animals can run away, or fight
back, but plants do not have this option.
Their defense is based partly on thorns and prickles, but
far more important than these is the array of invisible
chemical weapons that pervade almost all plant tissues.
Some of these simply taste bad; others cause vomiting or
other ill effects. A few even mimic the hormones of insects
or mammals and thus disrupt their growth or sexual development.
Plant-eating animals have, in the course of their evolution,
simply adapted to these chemicals in their food. They can
detoxify them sufficiently to be able to feed on their chosen
food or foods, and the plants can ward them off sufficiently
to stay alive. It is rather like the situation between criminals
and the police, where each side becomes increasingly cunning,
better armed, and more ruthless, but neither side ever wins
and obliterates the other. The term biological arms race
aptly describes this situation.