Food Intolerance Symptoms
Gastro Intestinal: Chronic diarrhoea, IBS, gas, bloating, duodenal, ulcer, malabsorption, Crohn’s disease, colic, constipation and high acid.
Urinary & Reproduction: Bed-wetting, chronic bladder infections, cystitis.
Immune: Chronic infections, chronic fatigue syndrome, ear infections, rheumatoid arthritis.
Mental/emotional: Depression, anxiety, hyperactivity, insomnia, confusion, irritability, mood swings, lack of concentration, learning impairment, autism.
Musculoskeletal: Bursitis, joint pain, low back pain, arthritis.
Skin: acne, eczema, itching, skin rash, hives or urticaria, diaper rash.
Miscellaneous: Arrhythmia (fast heart beat), oedema, fainting, fatigue, lethargy, migraine, headaches, puffy eyes and dark circles under the eyes, itchy nose/throat, headaches, migraines, hypoglycaemia (low blood sugar), horizontal creases in bottom eyelids, chronic swollen glands, chronic non-cyclic fluid retention.
Psychological symptoms associated with intolerances are:
Brain fag, poor concentration, irritability, confusion, depression, paranoia, hypersensitivity, aggressiveness, mood swings, schizophrenia.
It is still not understood why some foods have an adverse effect on some people as widespread intolerance has only been recognised fairly recently. Pesticides, toxic gases, sealed houses and ready made meals may be partly to blame as may the overloading of the liver with tea and coffee.
Elimination Diet
An elimination diet can be carried out to find out which foods may be causing problems. The idea behind it is that the reaction either disappears completely whilst various foods are eliminated or that a reaction occurs when the food is reintroduced. It is a very accurate if all common allergens (foods usually most frequently eaten and crave) are removed from the diet for a period of 2 – 4 weeks and then reintroduced one by one every other day. It is a very limited diet usually consisting of poultry, lamb, rice, green vegetables and occasionally some non-citrus fruit.
Advantages – person finds out for themselves what is contributing to their symptoms and is more likely to be motivated to avoid it.
Disadvantages – difficult for a person to implement and it may be hard to recognise which food is causing a problem if there is more than one offending food.
On reintroduction of the food it is a good idea to take your pulse at rest for 60 seconds and write it down. Then eat a large amount of the suspected food and take your pulse again after ten minutes. Check your pulse again after 30 minutes and again after 60 minutes – if your pulse rises or drops by 10 points this is a good indicator that a food does not agree with you. Also write down any symptoms that you have over the next 24 hours. This test may not always be reliable as some foods take 2 – 4 days to cause a reaction.
Allergy Testing
IgE is the antibody produced in classical allergy which can be tested with various companies.
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