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Food
Sensitivities
Food
sensitivities are very common in our society, although
most people don’t know if they have any. One of the
best ways to discover your food sensitivities is to do a
food elimination diet. You do this by removing a food
from your diet for a minimum of six weeks (120 days is
best), then reintroduce the food and see how you feel.
Some of the most common food sensitivities are: gluten,
wheat, dairy, corn, soy, and chocolate, but it could be
any food.
Dr. Kenneth Fine
studied various groups of people for gluten sensitivity
by measuring immunological markers in the stool, the
results are as followed.
|
Group |
Number of Subjects |
Percent Positive |
|
Normal Volunteers |
65 |
29% |
|
Autoimmune Disease |
2747 |
62% |
|
Abdominal Symptoms |
1366 |
63% |
|
Family History of
Celiac/Gluten Sensitivity |
1217 |
68% |
|
Microscopic Colitis |
419 |
69% |
|
Chronic Fatigue |
141 |
61% |
|
All Other Symptoms |
604 |
63% |
|
Celiac Sprue |
45 |
100% |
Food
sensitivities have been associated with some diseases.
A study on multiple sclerosis, published in
Neurology
2001 states, “The authors describe 10 patients with
gluten sensitivity and abnormal MRI. All experienced
episodic headache, six had unsteadiness, and four had
gait ataxia. MRI abnormalities varied from confluent
areas of high signal throughout the white matter to foci
of high signal scattered in both hemispheres.
Symptomatic response to gluten free diet was seen in
nine patients.” This study shows that 9 out of ten
patients diagnosed with abnormal brain MRI’s diagnosed
with M.S. showed dramatic improvement with a 30 day
gluten free diet.
Dimentia is has
been linked to gluten allergies.
Lancet 1999 stated
"High levels of circulating
antigliaden antibodies
(gliaden is a protein sub fraction of gluten) were found
in
57% of patients with neurological dysfunction and early
stage dementia.
According to the
European Journal of Gastroenterology 1998, “celiac
disease patients (a gluten allergy) have a ten times
increase of auto immune thyroiditis.” If you have
autoimmune thryroiditis, but you don’t have celiac
disease, it’s a safe assumption that you have a gluten
sensitivity and it should be completely eliminated from
the diet.
Type 1 diabetes
has been associated with a dairy sensitivity.
The New
England Journal of Medicine, 1992 states, "Studies have
suggested that bovine serum albumin is the milk protein
responsible for the onset of diabetes... Patients with
insulin- dependent diabetes mellitus produce antibodies
to cow milk proteins that participate in the development
of islet dysfunction... Taken as a whole, our findings
suggest that an active response in patients with IDDM
(to the bovine protein) is a feature of the autoimmune
response."
According to Diabetes, June 2000 “high level
consumption of cow’s milk during childhood (<0.5 liters
daily) increases the risk of type 1 diabetes 3 fold
among siblings of affected children.” They also found
that when they had the HLA-DQB1 susceptibility marker
the risk increased to 5.4 times.” Diabetes Care,
December 1994 found that the consumption of cows milk in
nine Italian regions was directly correlated with the
incidence of Type 1 diabetes.
A lack of
stomach acid has been associated with food
sensitivities. A study of the use of
medications to reduce stomach acid has been found to
increase food allergies. The
FASEB Journal, 2005 stated,
"we have demonstrated that
anti-ulcer drugs, such as
H2-receptor blockers and proton pump inhibitors, promote
the development of immediate type food allergy
toward digestion-labile proteins in mice...Thus, the
relative risk
to develop food-specific IgE
after anti-acid therapy
was 10.5
(95% confidence interval: 1.44-76.48).”
Medications will do this but if your body doesn't
produce it's own stomach acid you will increase your
risk of food allergies.
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