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Food Allergies and Intolerances

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Title: Food Allergies and Intolerances


1
Food Allergies and Intolerances
  • H. Singh
  • NTRS 525

2
What Is A Food Allergy
  • A food allergy is an adverse reaction to a food
    or food component that involves the immune system
  • A food allergen is the part of a food a person is
    allergic to
  • Food allergens are proteins, not fat,
    carbohydrates, vitamins or minerals
  • 2-5 in infants most common milk and eggs
  • 2.4 in adults

3
Who Has Food Allergies?
  • Although anyone can develop a food allergy, the
    ability to become allergic tends to be inherited
  • Many people who have food allergies also have
    asthma, or show sensitivities to inhaled
    allergens such as dust, cat and pollen

4
What Happens WithA Food Allergy
  • When someone eats a food they are allergic to,
    the food allergen stimulates the immune system to
    release antibodies
  • The antibodies cause body cells to release
    substances, which cause allergic reactions

5
Most Common Food Allergies
  • Food allergies can occur to almost any food, but
    most allergic reactions are caused by a limited
    number of foods
  • milk shellfish
  • eggs soy
  • wheat peanuts most common anaphylaxis
  • fish tree nuts like walnuts
  • Additives preservatives, flavoring, coloring,
    antioxidants cause Pseudo-allergenic reactions

6
Where does it start?
  • According to a recent study, the prevalence of
    peanut allergy--which accounts for the majority
    of emergency-room visits and deaths related to
    food allergies each year--doubled between 1997
    and 2002.
  • The story of food allergy is a story about how
    the development of the immune system is tightly
    linked to the development of our digestive tract
    or, as scientists and physicians usually refer to
    it, our gut. A human being is born with an
    immature immune system and an immature gut, and
    they grow up together. The immune system takes
    samples of gut contents and uses them to inform
    its understanding of the world--an understanding
    that helps safeguard the digestive system (and
    the body that houses it) against harmful
    microorganisms.
  • The window for fine-tuning a baby's mucosal
    immune system is relatively narrow, starting when
    the infant is colonized with vaginal and
    intestinal bacteria from the mother's birth canal

7
Terminology
  • Allergic reactions are Antigen-Antibody reactions
  • Antigen a foreign substance
  • Antibody a protein produced in response to an
    antigen that is capable of binding specifically
    to the antigen!
  • Haptens - a small molecule that has the ability
    to combine with an Ab or a cell-surface receptor.

8
Our immune systems
  • Immune cells are woven into the fabric of the gut
    than being restricted to one place, but there are
    discrete structures for immune surveillance.
  • Membrane cells (M-cells) recognize antigens and
    pass them to bone marrow cells (B-cells), Thymus
    cells ( T-cells) and antigen presenting cells
    (APC) such as macrophages and dendritic cells
  • Activated B cells start producing antibodies

9
Understanding Immunological concepts
  • Food allergies are related to specific defenses
    or specific immunity
  • Immune literary means free of burden
  • Actions of the immune system are triggered by
    antigens (foreign substances).
  • Most antigens are large protein molecules Some
    antigens are polysaccharides and few are
    glycoproteins (carbohydrate and protein) or
    nucleo-proteins.

10
Understanding Immunological concepts
  • Human body has two categories of defense system
  • Non specific defenses
  • Physical barriers (skin and mucous membrane)
  • Chemical barriers (saliva, mucus, gastric juices
    etc)
  • Cellular defenses (certain cells can eat
    invaders-phagocytes)
  • Inflammation (reddening, swelling and temperature
    increase of the affected sites)
  • Fever (elevated body temperature)
  • Molecular defenses (interferons or complementary
    system etc.)
  • Specific defenses or specific immunity
  • Antibodies (many kinds of antibodies for many
    kinds of antigens)

11
Acquired-Active-Natural Specific Antibodies
(Immunoglobulins)
  • There are five classes of Immunoglobulins
  • 1) IgG Main class of antibodies in blood-also
    from mother-to-child (20)
  • 2) IgA Small amount in blood, but larger amount
    in tears, milk, saliva, mucus and the lining
    tissues
  • 3) IgM First Antibody secreted during the
    primary response
  • 4) IgE (Reagin) Found mainly in body fluids
    and skin --- Associated with allergy reactions!
  • 5) IgD Found in B-Cell membrane

12
Who makes the immunoglobulin IgE?
The allergen enters the body and is recognized by
sIg on a B-lymphocyte. The B-lymphocyte
proliferates and differentiates into plasma cells
that produce and secrete IgE against the allergen.
Picture credit used with permission from Dr.
Gary E. Kaiser http//www.cat.cc.md.us/courses/bio
141/lecguide/index.html
13
Whats next?
The next time the allergen enters the body, it
cross-links the Fab portions of the IgE bound to
the mast cell. This triggers the mast cell to
degranulate, that is, release its histamine and
other inflammatory mediators.
  • Picture credit used with permission from Dr.
    Gary E. Kaiser
  • http//www.cat.cc.md.us/courses/bio141/lecguide/in
    dex.html

14
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15
Reasons of Symptoms
  • When released from mast cells , histamine causes
    vasodilation and an increase in permeability of
    blood vessel walls. These effects, in turn cause
    the familiar symptoms of allergy including a
    runny nose and watering eyes. When released in
    the lungs, histamine causes the airways to swell
    shut in an attempt to close the door on offending
    allergens and keep them out. Unfortunately, the
    ultimate result of this response is the wheezing
    and difficulty in breathing seen in people with
    asthma - an occasionally deadly allergic
    complication which kills an estimated 4000
    Americans yearly.

16
Hidden food ingredients in ready made food
products!
  • Milk and milk product derivatives
  • Egg and egg derivatives
  • Peanuts, tree nuts and derivatives
  • Fish derivatives (surimi, fish sauce, fish paste
    etc)
  • Soy and its derivatives

17
To make the matter worse!
  • Eating out is a nightmare?
  • African, Chinese, Indonesian, Mexican, Thai, and
    Vietnamese dishes often contain peanuts. It is
    recommended that peanut-allergic individuals
    avoid these types of foods and restaurants.
  • For traditional food restaurants,
    cross-contamination of allergens to other foods
    can also a problem.

18
Food Allergy Symptoms
  • Allergic reactions to foods usually occur within
    minutes to a few hours after eating an offending
    food
  • In very sensitive people, even smelling or
    touching the offending food may produce an
    allergic reaction.
  • Food allergies vary in their severity and how
    swiftly symptoms appear. The immediate,
    life-threatening reactions experienced by some
    people (most often to peanuts) happen when the
    allergen binds to IgE-type antibodies, which then
    trigger the release of histamine, the compound
    responsible for acute inflammation with itching,
    sneezing and other allergy symptoms

19
Food Allergy Symptoms
  • Food allergy reactions vary from person to
    person, as well as within the same person
  • The same food can produce totally different
    symptoms in different people, as well as varying
    symptoms within the same person

20
Symptoms-Food Allergy
  • Nausea
  • Diarrhea
  • Abdominal cramps
  • Pruritic rashes
  • Angioedema
  • Asthma/rhinitis
  • Vomiting
  • Hives
  • Laryngeal edema
  • Anaphylaxis

Exercise exacerbates symptoms
21
Symptoms
  • Nose, Throat and Lung Reactions -Sneezing nasal
    congestion runny nose chronic cough shortness
    of breath or other breathing difficulties, asthma
  • Stomach and Intestinal Reactions -Nausea
    abdominal pain and bloating, vomiting diarrhea
    cramping gas
  • Skin - Swelling of lips, mouth, tongue, face or
    throat hives rashes itching, skin redness

22
Anaphylaxis
  • Different parts of the body experience food
    allergy reactions at the same time
  • Reactions can progress rapidly and may include
    itching, hives, sweating, swelling of the throat,
    breathing difficulties, lowered blood pressure,
    unconsciousness and even death

23
Severe Allergy Reactions
  • Most food allergic reactions are mild, but a
    small number of food-allergic individuals have
    severe reactions that can be life-threatening
  • Anaphylaxis is rare, but can be a possibly fatal
    food allergy reaction

24
Have A Plan
  • People who have severe allergic reactions need to
    plan for handling emergency situations
  • May carry epinephrine for self-injection and
    warning medical alter bracelets or necklaces in
    case they become unconscious

25
How to deal with food allergy!
  • There is no specific antibody for any specific
    foods available!
  • People who have food allergy need a total
    avoidance of the offending foods.
  • Read food ingredient list.
  • Eliminate cross-contamination during cooking and
    preparation!!!!

26
Common medications prescribed by doctors
  • epinephrine (relaxes smooth muscle, constricts
    blood vessels, and stimulates the heart used for
    severe systemic reactions)
  • antihistamines (block the binding of histamine
    to histamine receptors on target cells)
  • sodium cromolyn (prevents mast cells from
    releasing histamines).

27
Living With A Food Allergy
  • The only proven treatment for a food allergy is
    to avoid the offending food
  • A elimination diet must be carefully developed
    and be personalized to take into account the
    ability of an individual to tolerate an allergic
    food

28
Living With A Food Allergy
  • Using an elimination diet for 1-2 years may
    promote outgrowing a food allergy
  • Some food allergies, particularly to peanuts,
    nuts, fish and shellfish can last a lifetime
  • No drugs are available to treat food allergies

29
Proper Diagnosis
  • Elimination tests and food challenges should be
    conducted only under medical supervision
  • ELISA and RAST are reliable tests for diagnosing
    allergies
  • Cytotoxic testing and symptom provocation are
    unreliable methods

30
RAST or ELISA
  • Radioallergosorbent test (RAST) or enzyme-linked
    immunosorbent assay (ELISA) are reliable
    skin-prick testing and blood testing for
    diagnosing allergies.
  • Two unreliable methods for diagnosing food
    allergies are cytotoxic testing, and symptom
    provocation testing, where a dose of the food
    extract is placed under the tongue or injected.

31
How about food intolerance?
  • Direct effect of food
  • Enzyme deficiency (e.g., lactase, sucrase etc)
  • Symptoms of food intolerance bloating, cramping,
    gas and diarrhea
  • Main cause of food intolerance carbohydrates
    (lactose, fructose, sorbitol)
  • True Allergy-Total avoidance necessary!
  • Intolerance- Small amount may be tolerated

32
Food allergy and biotechnology
  • Although it is not easy to predict potential
    allergenicity of foods derived from GMO!, there
    are some criteria to go by
  • Sources of transferred genetic material While
    the crops from staple foods are derived contain
    tens of thousands of different proteins,
    relatively few are allergenic.
  • Synthesis of allergenic proteins also depends on
    the growing conditions and other stress factors.
  • Molecular weight of most known allergens are
    between 10,000 and 40,000.

33
Food allergy and biotechnology
  • The amino acid sequence of many allergens is
    readily available.
  • Labile allergens in foods that are eaten cooked
    or undergo other processing before consumption
    are of less concern.
  • Most allergens are resistant to gastric acidity
    and to digestive proteases.
  • New proteins expressed in non-edible portions of
    plants, for example are not of a concern in terms
    of food allergy.

34
Resources for food allergies
  • Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis network (FAAN)
  • Other resources
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