Dori Zook wrote:
> I think Ray touches on this in "NeanderThin" but I've once again loaned out
> my copy (gotta get some paperbacks, dammit). Question: can food allergens
> lead to hives? Long/short, a friend has developed hives and saw them
> disappear thanks to a prescribed antihistamine but he prefers not to use
> prescription medications. He's also under some heavy stress. I wonder if
> the stress is the proverbial straw on his immune system's back and, kablamo,
> hives. Oh, he also noticed an end to his indegestion when he took the
> antihistamine. Could be serendipity... Ennyhoo, if you've seen hives come
> when you eat a "forbidden fruit" or leave when you follow the path, lemme
> know! Send it to the list or to me, personally, whichever you prefer. I'm
> going to do some searching and see what I can find.
I get hives from strawberries as well as tomatoes when eaten in excess.
And I've noticed that if I cheat on gluten-containing food, I get what I call
"itchy bumps", not
fluid-filled, but intensely itchy, at joint areas like knees, ankle, elbow,
feet.
I think this is dermatitis herpetiformis, which is a known symptom of
celiac disease. Some celiacs don't ever get the intestinal problems but just
the rash, and doctors usually have a heckuva time figuring it out.
Going paleo (strictly) certainly solves this problem.
I'm not sure if an antihistamine would help if the problem was celiac; it
is not an IgE problem.
Lynnet
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