Food intolerance is a broad label that describes adverse reactions to food that do not involve the immune system. This site uses the term food intolerance as it has been defined by the Allergy Unit at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Australia, which corresponds to what some call pharmacological food intolerance.
What is food intolerance?
Food intolerance occurs when chemicals in food produce side effects, similar to the way that drugs produce side effects. Some people are more sensitive to these effects than others.
Food intolerance is not an allergy. A food allergy is an oversensitivity to a protein in a specific food, while food intolerance is a sensitivity to chemicals found in a wide variety of foods.
Organic, fresh, or processed foods can all cause adverse reactions – not all trigger chemicals are man-made.
Symptoms can be physical or behavioral, especially in children. Some people suffer from more than one symptom, and symptoms can change over time.
Food intolerance may affect up to 10% of the population when all food chemicals are considered, which is at least 2 times the prevalence of food allergy. Still, this means that food intolerance is relatively rare: for each food chemical, perhaps 99% of the population will experience no adverse effects.
Food intolerance is more common in adults than in children. Lifestyle factors may play a part in this. In comparison, more children suffer from food allergies than adults.
Children with food intolerance are more likely to be sensitive to food additives (artificial colors, flavors, and preservatives) than adults.
Food intolerance seems to run in families, although each family member may be sensitive to a different food chemical. More women experience food intolerance than men.
Food intolerant people are also likely to suffer from allergies. Food intolerance can make existing flare-ups of eczema and asthma worse, but cannot bring about these conditions on its own.
When do people experience food intolerance symptoms?
Symptoms can take hours to days to appear.
The severity of symptoms depends on how much of a food chemical was eaten, even over the course of several days.
Since symptoms are dose-dependent, they may seem unpredictable – sometimes they happen, sometimes they don’t. But if you think of food in terms of its chemical constituents, it all starts to make sense.
Some people are sensitive to more than one chemical and need to eat them in combination in order to see symptoms. Others only experience symptoms when they are under stress, sick, or have been exposed to chemicals in their environment.
Food intolerance should be considered only after your doctor has ruled out food allergies and other conditions and has given you the go ahead.
An elimination diet followed by food challenges is the only way to diagnose food intolerance.
Foods can contain more than one trigger chemical, making the order of the food challenges very important for ruling out all possible triggers. A registered dietitian can help.
Imagine that you are in a Chinese restaurant with your family. You’ll probably get a migraine later tonight (maybe from the amines in the soy sauce), but you’ve been craving Chinese food all week and you haven’t made the connection yet. Your daughter is drinking cup after cup of jasmine tea with her five spice stir fry, and this, combined with the other things she ate during the day, will give her hives again this evening. Your son asks you to read the fortune in his fortune cookie – “Knowledge is power,” it says, but it doesn’t warn you about the tartrazine in the cookie. He’ll be cranky tonight and distracted tomorrow morning. This is what you might experience if you suffer from food intolerance.
Lesson 1: What is food intolerance?
Food intolerance, as defined by the Allergy Unit at the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital in Australia, is a sensitivity to chemicals found in a wide variety of foods. It is also known as pharmacological food intolerance, a type of non-allergic food hypersensitivity. Food intolerance does not involve the immune system.
Is food intolerance real?
Yes. The existence of pharmacological food intolerance has been established by double blind placebo-controlled food challenges. The bulk of the research on food intolerance has been conducted in Australia, the UK, and Germany, and there is an increased awareness of food intolerance in these countries.
That said, two points should be kept in mind. First, even though food intolerance is real, it is relatively rare. These reactions are aptly categorized as ‘hypersensitivity’ reactions, meaning that most people – perhaps 99% depending on the substance – will not experience any problems from food chemicals at normal amounts. Second, not all evidence carries equal weight when it comes to the different trigger chemicals, and many questions still need to be answered.
The term ‘pharmacological’ is related of the nature of the substances that elicit food intolerance reactions. In addition to nutrients, foods contain chemicals that are foreign to our bodies (like benzoate in fruit or artificial colors in yogurt) or excess amounts of chemicals that our bodies normally produce (like tyramine or histamine in certain cheeses). This is obvious in the case of processed foods, but it is true for fresh or organic foods as well. The foreign or excess chemicals are processed in the body along the same lines as drugs, and in food intolerant people, they also produce drug-like effects. But why would such chemicals be present naturally in food? Because they are important to plants or because they are part of the normal ripening and aging processes.
Food intolerance is different in each person. Some people will be sensitive to certain trigger chemicals for their entire life, and these people will need to avoid foods that contain these chemicals in order to remain symptom-free. Others will only need to avoid their culprit foods for a time until they can resume eating them – perhaps in limited quantities – without seeing symptoms. Still others might only see problems when they eat large amounts of their offending foods or eat certain combinations of foods. But for everyone, the key to living life to the fullest is an accurate determination of which food chemicals are causing the problem. A registered dietitian or doctor can help you find your triggers through an elimination diet and food challenges.
Lesson 2: Food triggers linked to food intolerance
Table 1 contains the most commonly discussed food triggers linked to food intolerance. More than one trigger can be present in a given food, making it difficult to determine which foods contributed to your symptoms. Please be aware, though, that not all of the chemicals listed below are implicated in food intolerance by the same degree of evidence — for all the details, I recommend this open-access review:
Food intolerance symptoms can arise hours or even days after eating a trigger food, and their severity depends on how much you ate, what you ate during the previous few days, and whether you have other health conditions. On top of this, symptoms can be aggravated by illness, environmental chemicals (like fragrances), medications, hormonal changes, or stress. The most common symptoms of food intolerance are given below.
System
Symptom
Skin
Hives (urticaria), swelling (angioedema), itching, aggravation of eczema
Migraine, vertigo, fatigue, muscle pain (myalgia), growing pains, behavioral changes in children
Generalized
Non-immune anaphylaxis
Table 2: Possible symptoms of pharmacological food intolerance
Lesson 4: Food intolerance as a food hypersensitivity
Adverse reactions like food intolerance and food allergy are classified as hypersensitivity reactions, where the concept of hypersensitivity has real meaning. Food hypersensitivities are reproducible reactions brought about by quantities of foods that most people can tolerate. In other words, to classify an adverse reaction as a food hypersensitivity, you must first think about the effect that a normal amount of that food would have on the average person.
Food hypersensitivities are divided into two main groups: those that are caused by the immune system (immune-mediated hypersensitivities) and those that aren’t (non-immune mediated hypersensitivities). If we consider food allergy – the poster child for immune-mediated food hypersensitivities – it is easy to see why hypersensitivity is an appropriate description. Allergies occur when the immune system overreacts to harmless proteins in foods, like milk, eggs, wheat, and soy, that lie at the heart of the Western diet. Only about 5% of the overall population is suffering from some type of food allergy, and the amount of food needed to trigger an allergic reaction can be much less than a typical portion.
There are more immune-mediated food hypersensitivities than just food allergies. These reactions involve other aspects of the immune system and may take a longer time to develop than a classic allergic reaction. Here I’m talking about problems like cow’s milk protein intolerance, soy protein intolerance and food protein induced entercolitis in children, celiac disease, and eosinophilic esophagitis — in some cases, asthma and eczema are also related to food. Notice that these conditions are occasionally lumped under food intolerance (and ‘intolerance’ even appears in a few of the labels), but strictly speaking, these are immune reactions.
The term food intolerance is used as the common name for non-immune mediated food hypersensitivities. The best-known type of food intolerance is lactose intolerance, the gastrointestinal discomfort that results from undigested lactose (milk sugar) in the colon. Roughly 75% of the world’s adults — 25% in the US and even fewer in northern Europe — do not produce enough lactase to digest all of the lactose they consume, but not all of these people will experience symptoms and, thus, lactose intolerance. In lactose intolerance, symptoms depend on a person’s gut bacteria and eating habits.
Pharmacological food intolerance, the focus of this primer, is also a non-immune mediated food hypersensitivity. For example, consider a person who has worked with their doctor to determine that their headaches and diarrhea are symptoms of histamine intolerance. In histamine intolerance, a person’s ability to break down histamine is impaired, so foods that are rich in histamine or that cause histamine to be released in the body can lead to symptoms. Histamine intolerance is a food hypersensitivity, because most people can tolerate normal quantities of histamine-rich or histamine-releasing foods.
That said, how do we gauge what “most people” can tolerate? As with food allergy and other immune-mediated food hypersensitivities, the non-immune hypersensitivities generally affect less than 10 or even less than 5% of the population. For example, less than 1% of adults are sensitive to food additives, at least 1% have histamine sensitivity, and around 6% suffer from food-induced migraines. This means that for any food hypersensitivity, perhaps 99% of people will experience no adverse reactions to those foods or food chemicals.
Last updated October 19, 2015
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