Learning About Food Allergies
Food allergies affect approximately 4 million Americans with
symptoms that can include difficulty breathing, an outbreak of
hives, asthma, vomiting, and even death. Oftentimes food
allergies are confused with an inability to tolerate certain
foods. Food intolerance usually brings about an entirely
different set of symptoms including a bloated feeling, gas, or
other similar type of discomfort.
Food Allergies or Food Intolerance
An easy way to distinguish food allergies from food intolerances
is to understand that an allergic reaction actually originates
in a person's immune system. A severe allergic reaction can
result in suffocation when the throat or the tongue swells so
much that a person cannot breathe. Given the fact that
approximately 150 people in the United States die each year from
food allergies, this condition is no laughing matter.
Individuals with known food allergies usually inherit this
condition from another member of the family. When food allergy
patients are studied, it is common to see that conditions such
as eczema, hay fever, and asthma affect other family members. http://www.w
ithallergies.com/helpwithallergies/
Foods That Cause Allergies
A few different kinds of foods seem to trigger the most allergic
reactions. And it seems that adults and children each have a
different set of foods that cause problems. The majority of food
allergy cases in children involve peanuts, milk, eggs, soy and
wheat. In adults, the foods most involved with allergies include
shellfish (such as shrimp, crab and lobster), peanuts, walnuts,
eggs, other fish and nuts that grow in trees.
Food allergies are so serious in some people that even smelling
the food can trigger an allergic reaction. However, food
allergies mostly become an issue after a person has eaten a food
to which he or she is allergic. Symptoms can begin right at the
point of entry with lips that begin to tingle or a tongue that
begins to itch. Gastrointestinal trouble follows with cramping,
or the need to vomit, or the development of diarrhea. As the
troublesome food breaks down and enters the bloodstream, it
travels towards the lungs and at that point conditions such as
asthma, eczema, shortness of breath, or low blood pressure can
all develop.
Dealing with Food Allergies
To protect themselves, people with known allergies to food
simply have to avoid coming into contact with these foods. That
sounds easy enough, however the reality is that it is not always
possible to avoid the foods that cause problems. Processed foods
can contain so many ingredients that sometimes the food culprit
is buried deep in the fine print. Legislation aimed at improving
food labeling as it pertains to food allergies has recently been
enacted and hopefully these new labeling requirements will
better protect those with food allergies.
Keeping children away from food allergens is difficult unless a
parent is vigilant about what goes into the child's mouth.
Parents of children with food allergies must inform everyone
from school officials to neighbors about the child's food
allergies and even then, accidents happen. Fortunately for
children with food allergies, most will outgrow this condition.