|   | Naturopathic Medicine: Food Allergies |    | 
		 
	 
    
        
     
   
   
    
    
    
        Allergies is a  word we hear a lot these days; everybody seems to have them, especially kids.  Atopic children -- those prone to allergies -- have chronic runny noses, red itchy eyes and a little crease just above the tips of their noses from constantly swiping off a drip.  This gesture is ruefully called the "allergic salute" in naturopathic pediatrics.  Often when people say they have 
       "allergies" they actually mean they have "sensitivities"
to 
       certain foods.  An allergic reaction has many different 
       manifestations, most of them quite profound.  These reactions 
       range from anaphylactic shock and death (for example an extreme 
       reaction to a bee sting where the bronchial airways swell shut) to
       chronic fatigue, malaise and foggy thinking from constant exposure
       to the allergen. Besides foods, people can be both allergic to, or
       have sensitivities to, pollens, danders, molds, preservatives, 
       pesticides, various building materials, and even to their own 
       hormones and tissues (as in auto-immune diseases). 
 
     
       It is important to recognize that a "reaction" to something
our 
       body doesn't like indicates a healthy, active immune system.  We
       are designed so that our secretions (stool, urine, tears, sweat,
       mucus) increase in the valiant attempt to expel foreign 
       particles.   Fever, for example, is the body's natural mechanism
       to kill bacteria and viruses, most of which cannot tolerate above
       103 degrees Fahrenheit.  However, when a mere bite of cheese or 
       sniff of a lush Spring breeze sets us off into a choking fit, 
       that's clearly an overreaction which needs to be remedied.
       A food allergy can be defined as a chronic or immediate 
       inappropriate reaction to ingestion of a food.  Broadly speaking,
       if the immune system is involved in the reaction, it is called an
       allergenic response.  If the immune system is not involved, such
       as in upset stomach, nausea, cramping, or headache, it is called
a 
       food "sensitivity" response.  This distinction may seem
academic,
       but it is important to distinguish to provide proper treatment. 
       With a bona fide food allergy, whose classic symptoms will be 
       discussed below, the best approach is to "decrease the burden,"
in 
       other words avoid the allergen whenever possible.  After a period
       of clearing the offending food from the bloodstream (which may 
       take 7 days to 7 months to forever) some people may be able to 
       take the food in frequently (no more than every 4 days) without 
       ill result.  The very best way to determine food allergenicity is
       the "elimination and challenge" diet discussed in Dr. Ronzio's
       article.  Food sensitivities may be healed by heeding Hippocrates'
       maxim, written many hundreds of years ago, "to many this has
been 
       the commencement of a serious disease when they have merely taken
       twice in a day the same food which they have been in the custom of
       taking once."  
        
 
       Some foods contain histamine, the biological chemical responsible
       for itchiness, red skin rashes and increased mucous production. 
       This is why you can buy synthetic "antihistamines" in
the drug 
       store to temporarily quell symptoms of allergy.  Much better to 
       avoid the foods: sausage, sauerkraut, tuna, wine, preserves, 
       spinach, tomato.  Other foods cause excessive release of histamine
       from the white blood cells ("mast" cells) that store it:
 eggs, 
       milk, shellfish, strawberries, tomatoes, chocolate, bananas, 
       papayas, pineapples, certain nuts, alcohol.  How about supporting
       our natural antihistamine, cortisol, which is secreted from the
       adrenal gland cortex?  Licorice root is excellent for adrenal 
       support.  Check it out.  Each and every person in a unique 
       individual, and treatment must reflect this principle.
       Ironically, the most common food allergens are ones that are 
       ubiquitous in the American diet:  wheat, corn, milk, sugar, soy.
 
       It is almost impossible to find canned, boxed or prepared foods 
       without most of these ingredients lurking silently within. 
       "Amaranth" and most all other cookies have wheat as the
first 
       ingredient; sparkling "natural" sodas contain corn syrup;
good old 
       Campbell's soups may contain lactose, dextrose, corn starch, soy
       oil.  Why are so many people suffering from food allergies today?
       Hearken back to the quote from Hippocrates.  Because we eat wheat,
       milk, orange juice, sugar, corn and soy constantly, daily, without
       a break. 
 
     
       Some of the most common warning signs of food allergy are: 
            - Dark circles under the eyes (allergic "shiners")
            
 - Puffiness under the eyes
            
 - Horizontal creases in the lower eyelids
            
 - Fluid retention and bloating (not the premenstrual kind)
            
 - Chronic swollen glands (under the jaw, armpits, groin)
   
       Symptoms and diseases associated with food allergy are:
       - Gastrointestinal: Canker sores, celiac disease (an extreme 
       intolerance to a fraction of wheat called gliadin, which produces
       crippling diarrhea and weight loss), stomach ulcer, gas, irritable
       colon, malabsoprtion, ulcerative colitis (may often produces blood
       in the stool and a constant hungry feeling).
 
        - Genitourinary:  Bed-wetting (eneuresis), chronic bladder 
       infections (cystitis), kidney disease
 
        - Immune:  Chronic infections including ear infections
 
        - Mental/Emotional:  Anxiety, depression, hyperactivity, inability
       to concentrate, insomnia, irritability, mental confusion, 
       personality change, seizures.
 
        - Musculoskeletal:  Bursitis, joint pain, low back pain.
 
        - Respiratory:  Asthma, chronic bronchitis, wheezing.
 
        - Skin:  Acne, eczema (dry or weeping, itchy, thickened, reddened 
       patches of skin usually on the face, wrists and inside elbows and
       knees), hives, itching, skin rash.
 
        - Other:  Irregular heart rate, edema (fluid swelling), fainting 
       spells, fatigue, headache, hyperlglycemia, itchy nose or throat,
       migraines, sinusitis.
   
 
       In general, besides avoiding allergenic foods, here are a few 
       general principles for minimizing adverse reactions to common 
       foods.  First, get plenty of foods containing Vitamin C, or take
a 
       dialy supplement.  Vitamin C strengthens cell membranes, including
       the cell membrane of the histamine-containing mast cell.  
       Digestive enzymes, particularly when eating a high-protein meal,
       may be in order.  Many of us suffer from inflammatory responses to
       undigested protein fragments in the blood stream, that seeped in
       through our intestines before sufficient digestion into simple 
       amino acids.  Essential fatty acids, at least 1 tablespoon daily
       of raw, cold vegetable, fish or evening primrose oils, help 
       decrease the inflammatory reactions (caused by the 1 and 3 series
       prostaglandins) and maintain T-cell function.
        
 
       How does all this relate to juicing?  Suffice it to say that 
       vegetables are BY FAR the least allergenic foods, and high in the
       vital nutrients that preserve the integrity of our tissues.  Some
       people may need to avoid the nightshade family of vegetables 
       because of reaction to the oxylates they contain.  These foods are
       tomato (primary offender), eggplant, potato, red & green peppers
       and tobacco.  Go easy on the fruit -- which is high in the 
       monosaccharides (simple sugars) fructose and glucose.  One fruit
       drink a day is plenty.  Go whole hog on vegetables, though, and 
       don't forget you can JUICE your dark leafy greens.  And garlic. 
 
     
	
    
        
     
   	
	       
     
    
    
    
   
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