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Allergy Center Home

What is Allergy?
Immediate and Delayed
Airborne Diseases
Ear Nose & Throat
Food Related Allergy
Food Allergy in Children
Delayed Hypersensitivity
Sick all Over
GIT Permeability & Antigen Entry
Type III Pattern
Inflammation
Drug Allergy
Anaphylaxis
Allergic Diseases
Asthma
Immunology
Allergy Diagnosis and Tests

Books to Read

Managing Food Allergy
Feeding Children
Immunology Notes
Air and Breathing
Food Allergy Abstracts

Diagnosis of Allergy

The desire for simple, office or laboratory test for allergy is easy to understand, but difficult to fulfill. No single test will ever reveal the complex and variable nature of allergic reactivity. The lack of specific tests for different kinds of allergy have hindered progress in this field.

Skin tests are best used to diagnose airborne allergens which cause hay fever.  There is a convenient correlation between nose-reactive IgE and skin-reactive IgE . By introducing tiny amounts of suspected antigens into the skin, a local wheal and flare reaction, similar to a mosquito bite, is produced if reactive IgE is present on skin mast cells.

The association of hay fever and some asthma, and skin tests with allergy practice was further confirmed by the relative success of "allergy shots". These shots came to characterize the allergist's office; other aspects of allergy practice often were neglected.

 Allergy shots are immunological treatments. The immune response to any reactive substance can be modified by giving repeated challenges of the reactive substances.

Serum assays of IgE antibodies are also useful in diagnosing type 1 food allergy. In a study of patients with asthma, and atopic dermatitis, plasma histamine and tryptase levels rose in the group with immediate reactions to food challenges. An elevated plasma tryptase level is thought to indicate mast cell activation. The authors noted subjects who had delayed symptoms - diarrhea at 4 hours, erythema and urticaria and 8 hours, and exacerbation of atopic dermatitis at 24 hours had slow or low histamine responses with no tryptase elevation.

The idea that standardize protein extracts of foods would be the most reliable and "scientific" tests for food allergy have been thwarted by observations that skin tests with fresh-extracts from food correlated better with symptoms on challenge testing. Food antigens can be complex, multiple, and may not survive processing into standardized extracts. In a review of studies of type 1 reactions to vegetables and fruit, mouth and tongue symptoms dominated. Systemic reactions included urticaria, angioedema, asthma, rhinitis, headaches, and itchy hands. Testing with commercial food-protein extracts was found less reliable than using the fresh food.

Skin tests do not reveal the more complex forms of food allergy. Some labs offer other tests for food allergy, including IgG RAST, and immune complex assays. While these tests produce interesting results, they are expensive and do not answer the main question - what should the patient eat?

The difficulty in diagnosing food allergy and other food-related problems in clinical medicine and disputes within the allergy community have left many patients suffering, frustrated and confused. At the same time as physicians default in the diagnosis and treatment of food-related illnesses, many non-medical practitioners have launched careers in the food and chemical "sensitivity" business, using diverse, sometimes curious and bizarre methods, dubious tests and questionable treatments. Even well-intentioned efforts to diagnose and treat food allergy are often based on faulty premises and fail to deliver proper results.

Food allergy is diagnosed by physicians who understand the multisystem, polysymptomatic patterns of illness involved. These patterns are revealed by a careful history, and the diagnosis made on clinical grounds. The pattern of food-related illness, the sequence of symptom production, and the distribution of disturbances in the body can be explained if complex causation is assumed. Without a well-equipped research laboratory it will not be possible to actually measure the pathophysiological events.

 See Diet Revision as Diagnosis.

The Allergy Center is devoted to explaining a complicated subject. We offer  rich resource online and encourage our readers to further pursue their interest by reading our books. Air and Breathing discusses airborne and food allergy as causes of respiratory disease. Immunology Notes explains in more detail how the immune system works and how immune mediated diseases develop. Many Alpha Education books refer to the Alpha Nutrition Program, a standard method of diet revision originally designed to solve the problems of food allergy. Starter Packs bundle the Alpha Nutrition Program, other books and formulas to help you get started solving your medical problems.  

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Air and Breathing
Managing Food Allergy
Immunology Notes
Alpha Nutrition Program

Alpha Nutrition Formulas are gluten free and do not contain cows milk, soya, or egg ingredients. They do not contain food dyes or other additives. They are suitable for vegetarians.  Alpha Nutrition ® is a registered trademark and a division of  Environmed Research Inc., Sechelt, British Columbia, Canada. In business since 1984. Online since 1995.

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