Symptoms of Allergy
Probably no recent development in the study of
allergy has caused more confusion than the recognition of the
multiplicity of symptoms it can produce. No doubt this has
hampered progress, since the traditional medical view of patients
with many and variable symptoms has always been that they were
somehow neurotic and ‘putting it all on’.
This dismissive tendency is made worse if the
patient suffers psychological disturbances, yet few doctors have
ever thought to question whether such personality changes could
also be caused by an allergy. Even if they were not, if you had a
chronic disease or symptoms that came and went in a baffling way –
headache one week, sore throat the next, diarrhoea the next, and
so on – wouldn’t you expect to feel bad mentally? Some doctors now
like to use the term ‘pseudo-food allergy syndrome’, which does
not help patients at all. One of the sacred texts of this
disagreeable trend appeared in the Lancet in an article by D. J.
Pearson, K. J. N. Rix and S. J. Bentley entitled ‘Food Allergy:
How Much is in the Mind?’ (Lancet i: 1259-61, 1983).
The trouble is, there researchers made no
allowance for the fact that their tests might be at fault and
assumed, because they got no reaction, that the patient was
deluded (their tests were the equivalent of evincing the effect of
eating a beef steak by allowing the patient only two capsules of
beef). This is not to say that there are no neurotic individuals
whose symptoms are an attempt to win sympathy from a world they
find too hostile; merely that such people are in a small minority.
How do such changeable and mysterious symptoms
come about? The modern allergist thinks in terms of target
organs
or shock organs. The concept is really very simple:
an allergic reaction is, of course, a manifestation of the whole
person, but some part of the body, or a particular organ (for
reasons which are not clear) receives more of the trauma than the
rest. Symptoms will depend largely on the function of this organ.
(see also target organs section)
Five Key Symptoms of Allergy
The range of potential symptoms caused by an
allergy is vast. Nevertheless, Dr Richard Mackarness gives five
key symptoms that point the way to allergic illness and that have
special importance. He believes that without one of the following
symptoms diagnosis is unlikely:
| Over or underweight, or fluctuating weight |
|
Persistent fatigue that isn’t help by
rest. |
|
Occasional swellings around the eyes,
hands, abdomen, ankles, etc. |
|
Palpitations or speeded heart rate,
particularly after meals |
|
Excessive sweating, not related to
exercise |
It needs mentioning that there should be no other obvious
explanation for these symptoms!
The table below lists symptoms commonly encountered
with allergies and maladaptation syndrome. The list is far from
complete.
It is important to say that most of the
symptoms could be caused by some other illness, although several –
such as sneezing attacks – are peculiar to allergies. What really
matters is the spread of symptoms – the more of these you have,
the more likely it is that your illness is allergic in origin.
Some are quite obvious; those denoting
digestive disturbance would point particularly to a food allergy
in the absence of any other pathology. Those affecting the brain
show up clearly as mood changes, altered feelings, etc.
Abrupt changes from being well to unwell (well
one minute, sick a few hours later) are also pretty characteristic
of allergic reactions.
What often surprises people are those symptoms
of feeling bad first thing in the morning. This is so common most
people can’t accept that it is even a disorder, never mind an
allergy. It’s almost considered normal to feel that way! The key
is food addiction. By the time a person wakes up in the morning,
he or she has often been off food for 12 to 14 hours: that’s
enough to start up withdrawal symptoms. He or she then has
breakfast, which acts like a ‘fix’ and symptoms start to clear.
Certainly these feelings are common, but that’s only because
masked food allergies are very common.
Another surprise is the ‘four – day flu’, which
isn’t really flu at all – it’s a food allergy. Dr Arthur Coca, a
pioneer of allergy detection and treatment, said, ‘You don’t catch
colds, you eat them’. He had a point: a person eats a food,
symptoms are centred on the nose and muscles so he or she
experiences headache, runny nose, aches and pains, may be even a
temperature, but a few days later, when the food leaves the bowel,
the symptoms disappear. That’s too quick for the natural course of
a viral disease.
Symptoms that May Be Attributable to Allergies
and Maladaptation
|
ORGAN |
COMMONLY ATTRIBUTABLE
SYMPTOMS |
|
eye |
redness, itching,
blurred vision, ‘sandy’ or gritty feeling in the eyes, seeing spots, heavy eyes, seeing flashing lights, dark rings under the eyes, double vision (comes and goes), unnatural ‘sparkle’ to the eyes, watering |
|
ear |
ringing in the ears, hearing loss, itching and redness of pinna (outer ear), recurring infections (especially if the
sufferer is a child), earache |
|
cardio- vascular |
rapid or irregular pulse, chest pain, palpitations, especially after eating, tight chest, pain on exercise (angina), raised blood-pressure |
|
lungs |
tightness in chest, wwheezing, hyperventilation (over-breathing) coughing, poor respiratory function |
|
nose, throat and mouth |
metallic taste, post-nasal drip, mouth ulcers, stuffed up nose, frequent sore throats, sinusitis, stiffness of throat or tongue, sneezing |
|
gastro- intestinal |
nausea, diarrhoea, dyspepsia, constipation, variability of bowel function, abdominal bloating, flatulence, hunger pangs, acidity, pain in the stomach, abdominal distress |
|
skin |
eczema, urticaria (hives), rash that isn’t eczema, excessive sweating, itching, blotches, chilblains |
|
musculo- skeletal |
swollen, painful joints, aching muscles, muscular spasm, shaking (especially on waking), cramps, fibrositis, pseudo-paralysis |
|
genito- urinary |
PMT, menstrual difficulties, frequency of urination, genital itch, bedwetting, urgency, burning urination |
|
head |
mild or moderate headache, migraine, sick headaches, solid feeling, pressure, throbbing, stiff neck,
stabbing |
|
nervous system |
inability to think clearly, memory loss, ‘dopey’ feeling, stammering (attacks), terrible thoughts on waking, insomnia, maths and spelling errors, blankness, delusion, crabby on waking, hallucination, difficulty waking up, desire to injure self, convulsions, light-headedness, twitching |
|
stimulated overative mental state |
silliness, anxiety, intoxication, panic attacks, hyperactivity, irritability, uncontrollable rage, tenseness, restlessness, smashing-up-attacks, fidgeting, general speeding up, restless legs |
|
depressed underactive mental state |
‘brain fag’, depression, feeling withdrawn, lack of confidence, melancholy, low mood, unreal or depersonalized feeling, confused, tearful |
|
other very revealing symptoms |
Sudden tiredness after eating, sudden chills after eating, vertigo, abrupt changes from feeling well to unwell, feeling unwell all over |
Copyright © 2003 Keith Scott-Mumby ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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