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20+ Food Intolerances...help?!


takeme out todinner

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takeme out todinner Newbie

Hi,

I


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mushroom Proficient
Hi,

I’m new to this forum and am need of help.

I was diagnosed with celiac this summer (after 4 years of being misdiagnosed and basically told it was just in my head). After the diagnoses I began feeling so much better, but after a couple of months (4 months ago) I started to feel horrible again. I remained on the gluten-free diet but started to restrict dairy. Again this helped and I thought this was the root to my problems. Guess again... The sickness struck again and so I eliminated soy and nuts. This helped but still sick. I began gaining extreme weight (10-15 pounds in a month) but was barely eating any food. I decided I couldn’t go on with this any longer (I’m only 25) and went to a natural path that did blood testing for food allergies and intolerances.

I just got the results and I’m in shock. I have to eliminate wheat/gluten, cows milk, eggs, beans, peas, soy, grapefruit, pineapple, nuts, yeast and the worst thing possible –RICE (my lifeline since gluten-free). On top of this- I have allergies to melon, oats, salmon, aspartame, chicken, sesame, asparagus, carrots, corn and peas.

I feel lost and am in disbelief – how is it possible to have all these food intolerances and allergies? What am I going to eat?

The natural path put me on a brown rice diet – but I thought that the intolerance test said I couldn’t have rice (when I told her this she said I just cant have white rice?). I don’t really agree with this diagnosis. She told me to go on this and come back in a month. The diet is full of foods I can’t eat and she didn’t suggest anything. I’m really scared to go on this diet because rice just went right through me and so to think of what having a diet that consists of only rice will do to my body is not encouraging. I’m so sick of being sick.

Basically, I’m looking for any help I can get. Anyone else go through this, what do you eat, does the brown rice diet help/work, why so many intolerances???? Even similar stories to maybe make me feel a bit normal – because I don’t know how I’m going to explain this one to people.

Thank you so much for reading and hopefully for some advice!

Hi, and welcome to the forum.

I have time only for a quick answer. The good news is that a lot of these intolerances may be temporary. And you well may be able to tolerate some things that you tested mildly positive to, just not very much of them.

Concentrate on what the tests show you can eat for a while-l-ooks like white fish, potatoes, lots of fruit, beans, onions, garlic, tomatoes, spinach, swiss chard, etc., for starters. See how that goes and then try adding in something you were only mildly sensitive to and see how that goes. It will be a long gradual process, but your system may well settle down and tolerate more than it can now. Here's hoping :)

Mother of Jibril Enthusiast

With celiac disease it's important to avoid gluten 100% (as you know). If you have anaphylactic allergies to specific foods... for example, if your throat closes up when you eat peanuts... then it's important to be very careful about avoiding those foods too. It's possible that you have another condition going on (IBS, Chron's, ulcerative colitis... there are lots of possibilities)... have you seen a gastroenterologist lately?

If you're really sure that you don't have any other health problems going on, then my suggestion would be to eliminate ONE food at a time for a couple of weeks and reintroduce it to see how you feel. That's the best way to tell if you're really allergic/intolerant or not. RAST and ELISA testing have a lot of false positives, so you need to test your reaction in real life to be sure if that food is a problem or not (if you have anaphylactic reactions then you should only do this under a doctor's supervision).

My guess is that you probably don't need to eliminate all those foods from your diet. In fact, you could cause a lot of problems for yourself by going on a really restrictive diet... if you start eating the same foods every day (because you don't have anything else to eat) it's easy to become hypersensitive :(

Swpocket Rookie

Hey, as crazy as it may be with all the allergies, I myself have 29 other allergies to things aswel. If rice makes you sick then I wouldn't go on the diet. There is other replacements out there and you shouldn't have to restrict yourself to just rice.

Juliebove Rising Star

I am assuming these are IgG allergies/intolerances? If so, there is much disagreement about them even among naturopaths. I hope you got a copy of your labs. If not, you should. Each allergen should show a number next to it. That number won't mean much to you, but the Dr. should know what it means. Each food has its own number that indicates an allergy.

As for the rice, that just makes no sense. When my daughter was diagnosed, that particular naturopath told her to eat some things she was allergic to. We don't see him any more.

Our current naturopath doesn't believe in such allergies, but does say if we react badly to a particular food, not to eat it. Our allergist said the same thing.

It is possible that you may have to eat a severely restricted diet for a few weeks or months and then have the test repeated. With IgG allergies, you will often test allergic to those foods you eat the most often. But if you stop eating them, the allergy may seem to go away.

It would be wise to have the test repeated every few years. This is what was recommended to my daughter. Some of her allergies went away, but she developed new ones. Peas and lentils! Also spelt which is weird because she only ever ate it once. This is one food the former Dr. said she could have. At the time she was allergic to gluten. She reacted very badly to it.

Currently my daughter is on a rotation diet which is something you may be able to do now or may have to do in the future. This means she can now eat the foods she used to be allergic to, but only twice a week and not on subsequent days. It's a pain! At first we tried to keep a food journal, but found we can usually remember when she has eaten all of her eggs, dairy, bananas, etc. for the week. The journal does help though because you can make any notations of signs of illness, rashes, nosebleeds or whatever symptoms you might have.

Ask your Dr. about this type of diet.

GlutenWrangler Contributor

I definitely understand what you're going through. I went through the same thing. I initially improved on the gluten-free diet, but then multiple food allergies began to surface. I dropped weight rapidly. Eventually I dropped down to 105 pounds. I was literally starving to death. I was finally hospitalized, and put on IV nutrition. That was almost 2 years ago. I'm still on IV nutrition, and I haven't eaten a thing in almost two years. My case is very extreme, and I don't mean to scare you. You shouldn't think that what happened to me will happen to you. Keep in mind that the blood tests for food allergies are notoriously inaccurate. And even though you have positive results, it doesn't necessarily mean you can't eat those foods. But this is something for you to discuss with your doctor. I just wanted to let you know that there are others out there who have gone through what you're going through. Good luck with everything,

-Brian

raisin Enthusiast

I also cannot eat the fallowing you listed : wheat/gluten, milk, beans, peas, soy, grapefruit, pineapple, nuts, yeast, rice, melon, oats, salmon, aspartame, sesame, asparagus, carrots. Plus no olives, nightshades (potatoes, tomatoes, peppers), tangerines/tangelos, alfalfa, red/vidalia onions, bananas, kiwis, strawberries; maybe broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower; and I still manage to eat a nutritious diet, with the help of Kirkman brand's hypoallergenic vitimins.

Now you may be a little less upset to know.. A number of your allergies are actually just part of one common lump allergy : Legumes (Nuts, soy, beans, peas, alfalfa), and no one (celiac or otherwise) is not reactive to aspartame, which is practically a toxin.

I was told by an "alternative" doctor to go on a diet that would have me eating many things I react to. The point was to "desensitize" myself. Horrible idea that made me sicker. I don't know what "natural path" is, but I can't tolerate brown rice much easier than white rice, and if you feel the same way, don't let some doctor or anyone else tell you your own digestive system is lying to you. Same applies to any other foods on the diet they're pushing.

I found the only thing that works for me, is trying one new food every 1-3 days, to check for reactions. In doing this, I found I could eat oranges, eggs, blackberries, raspberries, and even corn (all unexpected). Buckwheat tastes like rice, you could try that. Tapioca is a good alternative. Romain lettuce is very nutritious (better than Iceburg). Eat a variety of red meats (ostrich, buffalo, beef, venison), and/or whatever white meat you can tolerate is good; Like turkey, fish, shellfish. I can also eat white onions, which theoretically aid your digestive system. I also take slippery elm. Other foods.. I am still in the process of trying.


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Voss Newbie

I have celiac, am histamine-intolerant and salicylate-intolerant.

I lived a few weeks on only:

- water

- iceberg lettuce

- potatoes which are low in solanine, like Nicola potatoes

- 100% glutenfree Oatmeal, like Provena Oatmeal from Finland.

- Organic Turkey breast fillet

It was not explainable to anybody but I felt like Superman, feeling my body refresh itself. :D

Now I can tolerate more foods with some supplements im taking.

PaulaJ Newbie

I know how you feel--I have had multiple foods allergies for about 15 years. I have finally found what I think is the answer--LDA: Low Dose Allergy Immunotherapy. My advice to anybody who has multiple food allergies and/or chemical sensitivies is to learn about LDA and then search for a doctor in your area who practices environmental medicine and employs LDA in your state -- see: Open Original Shared Link (search for doctors by state). The equivalent of this outside of the United States (mainly in UK) is EPD (enzyme potentiated desensitization). Per my doctor "LDA is the closest thing to a cure for allergies." The shots help the body build suppressor T-cells, thereby turning off allergic reactions and all the histimine and other inflammatory chemicals allergies trigger in the body. The only other way to "cure" allergies is avoidance for several months and then reintroduction on a rotated basis (most allergies are not fixed/permanent)--but, if you are allergic to many, many foods/chemicals, LDA is an easier way out because avoidance is difficult for long periods of time.

Your ND is wrong. White rice/brown rice--if you are allergic to rice, you are allergic to rice--period. Also, people who are allergic to foods should be rotating their foods so as to keep their tolerance of them by not eating the same foods day after day. You can learn about rotation and also LDA at this website:

Open Original Shared Link

Paula

  • 2 years later...
Laura Wesson Apprentice

I definitely understand what you're going through. I went through the same thing. I initially improved on the gluten-free diet, but then multiple food allergies began to surface. I dropped weight rapidly. Eventually I dropped down to 105 pounds. I was literally starving to death. I was finally hospitalized, and put on IV nutrition. That was almost 2 years ago. I'm still on IV nutrition, and I haven't eaten a thing in almost two years.

whoa! I've been afraid of getting to that point.

There's a list of "exotic" foods that I can eat, at Open Original Shared Link

Those are the only foods I can eat!

You might check some foods now and then to see if you can eat them.

There are all sorts of unusual Central American roots like name' and malanga and cassava that I found I can eat.

I've been gluten-free for 8 years now, and my food reactions have faded a lot. I've heard they fade out in 5-10 years, and maybe in a couple of years I can start eating various foods I've had to avoid.

Laura

sreese68 Enthusiast

The natural path put me on a brown rice diet

domesticactivist Collaborator

Were these IgG allergies or IgE allergies or something else? My basic understanding is that the IgE ones are the histamine reactions and are permanent (though they can be helped by allergy shots), where the IgG ones indicate a leaky gut.

The IgG "allergies" come and go. If you have a leaky gut you will become IgG reactive to anything you are eating. This happened severely to one of my cousin's children, and they did a rotation diet for years while he was healing. Basically, you don't eat any one food long enough for it to cause a reaction.

Our family has taken the approach of using the GAPS diet. On the blog linked from my profile you can search on GAPS resources and read more about it. Or you can probably search here and find a bunch of past posts. The idea is that you only eat nutrient-dense, whole foods that are easy to digest and which help restore the balance of gut flora. The diet starts out extremely restricted, then foods are added one by one, slowly.

Laura Wesson Apprentice

The IgG "allergies" come and go.

My food sensitivities have lasted more than 5 years. Someone told me once that you can have a food sensitivity that's IgA-mediated and those are more permanent than IgG sensitivities which tend to go away after a few months.

I've tried foods that I quit eating for 5 years, and I got very sick.

I'm sensitive to tiny amounts, a small fraction of a milligram of protein. I tried a vitamin E capsule made from soy once and I was sick for 2 days. I tried 1/16 of a grain of corn - I sliced it up with a razor blade - and I was severely sick for 5 days, in bed and unable to sit up for more than a few seconds because of back pain, only trudging outside now and then, to let my dog into the backyard to pee.

I've heard the IgE allergies also involve a "leaky gut". That's why children have more of them, they have "leaky guts".

Anyway, I mostly just wanted to post to share my list of "exotic foods" which people who have a lot of food reactions, might still be able to eat.

Laura

domesticactivist Collaborator

Larapiz, thanks for adding that. I'm sorry if my post came across as suggesting that all of everyone's IgG allergies would go away or aren't severe! That's not what I meant... just that it *can* happen.

Our son showed IgG for all sorts of things, including wheat, barley, oats, and rye... obviously we don't plan on reintroducing those foods! There were lots of other foods on the list, though, too, many of which show absolutely no issues now.

Laura Wesson Apprentice

Larapiz, thanks for adding that. I'm sorry if my post came across as suggesting that all of everyone's IgG allergies would go away or aren't severe! That's not what I meant... just that it *can* happen.

as I said earlier, I was told that IgA sensitivities last for years. I don't know whether this is true or not. Enterolab tests for IgA antibodies to foods in stool samples. I had a lot of IgA antibodies to casein.

Other than Enterolab I haven't gotten food sensitivity testing. The IgG antibody tests are of questionable accuracy, so I've done elimination diets and food challenges. If I get sick from a food challenge, I get quite sick, so it's not ambiguous.

The allergists' offices just seem to know about the IgG food sensitivities that last a few months. I've wondered if the more permanent food reactions are a feature of celiac disease and less common.

I was talking about getting sick from tiny amounts of food, because non-IgE food sensitivities aren't supposed to be to tiny amounts. Brostoff and Gamlin's book on it says that people with non-IgE sensitivities only have problems with normal-portion amounts of food.

So again, Brostoff and Gamlin seem to be talking about something else, perhaps more common. Perhaps what I've been through is less common, a feature of an autoimmune disease - celiac disease.

  • 2 weeks later...
julandjo Explorer

as I said earlier, I was told that IgA sensitivities last for years. I don't know whether this is true or not. Enterolab tests for IgA antibodies to foods in stool samples. I had a lot of IgA antibodies to casein.

Other than Enterolab I haven't gotten food sensitivity testing. The IgG antibody tests are of questionable accuracy, so I've done elimination diets and food challenges. If I get sick from a food challenge, I get quite sick, so it's not ambiguous.

The allergists' offices just seem to know about the IgG food sensitivities that last a few months. I've wondered if the more permanent food reactions are a feature of celiac disease and less common.

I was talking about getting sick from tiny amounts of food, because non-IgE food sensitivities aren't supposed to be to tiny amounts. Brostoff and Gamlin's book on it says that people with non-IgE sensitivities only have problems with normal-portion amounts of food.

So again, Brostoff and Gamlin seem to be talking about something else, perhaps more common. Perhaps what I've been through is less common, a feature of an autoimmune disease - celiac disease.

If you look at my signature you'll see all the stuff I can't have. The only IgE allergies of any of that are tree nuts and cocoa. The rest must be IgG. None of this stuff ever bothered me until I went gluten free, and then for several months I just kept reacting to more and more foods. I've been at this level of restriction for 8 months now. I have read again and again that it's important to rotate my diet, but I only have 8 safe foods I can tolerate, so as you can imagine I eat every one every day!

My level of sensitivity is incredibly high too. Like, being in the kitchen when my husband measures and pours corn starch makes me sick for days. It's miserable, and has taken all spontaneity out of my life. I have to bring my own food every time I leave the house - it's not like I can just grab something to eat (besides apples). So, yeah... it's tough. Sorry you're dealing with this too.

  • 2 weeks later...
Laura Wesson Apprentice

I only have 8 safe foods I can tolerate, so as you can imagine I eat every one every day!

There's lots of food still available to eat. I have a list of foods I can eat at Open Original Shared Link Those foods are pretty much all hypoallergenic.

If you eat foods every day you may find yourself getting sensitive to those foods. I developed new food sensitivities on a gluten-free diet. If you have a lot of food sensitivities it would be a good idea to go on a rotation diet so you aren't exposed to any given food very often. I have a webpage that explains those things at Open Original Shared Link

I've been gluten-free for 8 years now and I seem to be getting out of the woods. My food reactions are much less severe.

Yes, it's a big pain. And difficult when one feels in danger of being pathologized as obsessive-compulsive.

One can get enzyme-potentiated desensitization - LDA in the United States - for desensitization. There have been a few clinical trials of EPD for inhalant allergies, some favorable, one not. It's also said to work for the "leaky gut" kind of food reactions but of course no research on that appears in Medline.

  • 2 weeks later...
Laura Wesson Apprentice

PS: If you think you have a long list of food sensitivities, look at my list:

I've gotten sick from every grain I tried - wheat, barley, rye, oats, millet, corn, rice, lemongrass. Also apples and citrus. After I completely eliminated corn from my diet, I found I ALSO get sick from all legumes, chocolate, buckwheat, strawberries, fish, shellfish, the onion family (garlic, onions), potatoes (so I avoid nightshades, except for cape gooseberries), stone fruits (cherries, apricots, peaches), eggwhites, green tea, stevia, unfiltered honey, poultry, flaxseed, pork, cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage, carrots and parsnips, guava, tree nuts, marijuana (hempseed), cranberries, beef, cardamom, sunflower, pepper, as in salt and pepper; turmeric, xylitol and D-mannose made from birch/beech trees, elderberries, dates, ginkgo biloba, yerba mate', acorn, poppy seeds, avocado, blackberries and raspberries, banana, cucumber and melons related to it.

But I still manage to rotate my foods. Just barely - if I lost a lot more I couldn't.

After you quit gluten, your body stops doing so much to mask food sensitivities and new ones may emerge. That happened to me. After an elimination diet in 2003 where I got sick from grains and a couple other foods, I kept eating fructose because I was addicted. It's made from corn. After I slowly tapered off the fructose and quit corn completely, I suddenly found I was sensitive to about 90% of the foods I was eating! That was early 2005. Since then I have lost a few more foods that I developed new sensitivities to.

I just had my first food reaction in years. I ate a cucumber to see if my food reactions are still there. They are :( I got quite sick and I stayed in bed a lot and slept for a couple days.

My food reactions are much less severe than they were in 2003 and somewhat better than in 2005. People have told me these other food reactions last about 5-10 years.

Laura

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      Welcome to the forum, @Karen Chakerian, We need more information, please.   What homeopathic remedies or medications are you taking now?  Do you still have the blood pressure and other symptoms?  What is included in your diet currently?  Dairy? Oats?  Processed gluten free foods?  Vegetarian?  Other food allergies?  Do you take vitamins?  When gluten is removed from the diet, the body stops making the anti-gluten antibodies that are usually measured in blood tests used to diagnose Celiac disease.  To measure the anti-gluten antibodies, you would have to consume 10 grams of gluten (4-6 slices of bread or equivalent) per day for a minimum of 2 weeks or longer.   A DNA test which looks for the most common genes for Celiac Disease may be a less invasive avenue to pursue.  Has your doctor checked you for nutritional deficiencies? Glad you're here!
    • knitty kitty
      @SaiP, Insomnia is listed as one of the side effects of Loratadine.   Niacin B3 in the form Tryptophan, Pyridoxine B 6, Folate B 9, Cobalamine B12, Magnesium, and Thiamine B 1 are needed to produce the sleep hormone melatonin.  Insomnia can also be caused by low Vitamin D and low Vitamin A.   A strict gluten free diet can be low in essential  vitamins.   Gluten containing products are required to replace vitamins lost in processing and milling.  Gluten free processed foods are not required to have vitamins added.  White rice is not a good source of B vitamins.  Brown rice is little better.  Exposure to light (even grocery store lights) and heat (during transportation) can destroy B vitamins.   B vitamins are easily lost in urine and diarrhea because they are water soluble.  If you have had diarrhea longer than two weeks, you are probably low in B vitamins.  Fat based vitamins, like Vitamins D and A, can be low due to fat malabsorption in Celiac disease, too.   Damaged villa in Celiac Disease do not absorb B vitamins and fat based vitamins and minerals well.  Supplementing with essential nutrients while villi heal boosts the ability to absorb essential vitamins and minerals.  Vitamins are stored and utilized inside cells.  Blood levels are not accurate measurements of vitamin deficiencies.  You can have normal blood levels while having deficiencies inside cells.  The brain orders cells to release their stores so the brain and heart can keep functioning.  This results in normal blood levels, but vitamin deficits inside cells.   Your indulgence in a little bit of bread is providing some, but insufficient amounts, of vitamins needed to make sleep hormone melatonin while keeping your inflammation and histamine production high.   In addition to a B Complex, I took 1000 mg of tryptophan before bed to correct my insomnia caused by high histamine levels.  Correcting my Vitamin D level to between 75-100 nmol/ml helped as well.  Also Passion flower extract is helpful in falling asleep quickly.   Please stop eating gluten bread as this will keep your autoimmune response triggering and your antibody levels won't go down and your histamine levels will stay up as well.   Celiac is a marathon, not a sprint.  P.S. I wanted to reiterate that insomnia and weight loss are symptoms of Thiamine deficiency.  Benfotiamine is a form of thiamine that promotes intestinal healing.  Thiamine is water soluble and nontoxic even in high doses.  High doses are needed to correct thiamine deficiency. All mitochondria in cells utilize thiamine.  The World Health Organization says to take 500 - 1000 mg per day of thiamine and look for health improvement.  Diets that are high in carbohydrates like rice and gluten require more thiamine.  For every 1000 calories from carbohydrates, we need 500 mg more thiamine.  Thiamine is found in meat.  Few veggies contain thiamine. Can you rise from a squat without assistance?  This is the field test for thiamine deficiency used by WHO.  If you cannot rise easily from a squat you may be thiamine deficient.
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