| Literature DB >> 28344921 |
Imke Reese1, Barbara Ballmer-Weber2, Kirsten Beyer3, Thomas Fuchs4, Jörg Kleine-Tebbe5, Ludger Klimek6, Ute Lepp7, Bodo Niggemann3, Joachim Saloga8, Christiane Schäfer9, Thomas Werfel10, Torsten Zuberbier11, Margitta Worm11.
Abstract
Adverse food reactions are far more often perceived than objectively verified. In our scientific knowledge on non-allergic adverse reactions including the so called histamine intolerance, there are large deficits. Due to the fact that this disorder is increasingly discussed in the media and the internet, more and more people suspect it to be the trigger of their symptoms. The scientific evidence to support the postulated link between ingestion of histamine and adverse reactions is limited, and a reliable laboratory test for objective diagnosis is lacking. This position paper by the "Food Allergy" Working Group of the German Society for Allergology and Clinical Immunology (DGAKI) in collaboration with the German Association of Allergologists (AeDA), the Society for Pediatric Allergology and Environmental Medicine (GPA), and the Swiss Society for Allergology and Immunology (SGAI) reviews the data on the clinical picture of adverse reactions to ingested histamine, summarizes important aspects and their consequences, and proposes a practical diagnostic and therapeutic approach.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse reaction; Diamine oxidase; Food; Histamine intolerance; Stool analysis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28344921 PMCID: PMC5346110 DOI: 10.1007/s40629-017-0011-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergo J Int ISSN: 2197-0378
Fig. 1Histamine degradation pathways
Symptoms and differential diagnoses in patients with suspected adverse reactions to ingested histamine
| Symptoms | Differential diagnosis(es) |
|---|---|
| Flushinga | Neuroendocrine tumors |
| Itchinga | Urticaria, pruritus sine materia, prurigo |
| Nausea/vomitinga | Gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer |
| Diarrhea and abdominal paina | Chronic inflammatory bowel disorders, carbohydrate metabolism disorders (lactose intolerance, fructose malabsorption), celiac disease |
| Rhinitisa | Allergic and non-allergic rhinitis |
| Dyspnea, dysphoniaa | Allergic and non-allergic asthma |
| Low blood pressure, dizziness, tachycardiaa | Anaphylaxis |
aAnalyzing symptoms with reference to their temporal onset provides important differential diagnostic information; adverse food reactions are only suspected in the case of a temporal relationship (min <4 h) to food intake
Fig. 2Proposed approach in patients with suspected adverse reactions to ingested histamine
Phases of the three-step dietary adjustment
| Phase | Aim | Recommendation | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1: | To reduce symptoms to the greatest possible extent | – Mixed diet with emphasis on vegetables and reduced biogenic amine intake, in particular histamine intake | 10–14 Days |
| Phase 2: | To expand the choice of food while taking individual risk factors (stress, menstruation, medication use, etc.) into account | – Targeted re-introduction of suspected foods while taking the patient’s individual dietary preferences into consideration | Up to 6 weeks |
| Phase 3: | Continuous, balanced supply of nutrients | – Individual nutritional recommendations guided by the individual histamine tolerance, taking exogenous risk factors into consideration | – |