Histamine intolerance
Histamine intolerance, sometimes called histaminosis, is an over-accumulation of histamine in the human body. Histamine intolerance is sometimes informally called an allergy; however, the intolerance is technically caused by the gradual accumulation of extracellular histamine due to an imbalance.
Roughly 1% of the population has histamine intolerance; of those, 80% are middle-aged.
General
The imbalance in histamine intolerance is between the synthesis and selective release of histamine from certain granulocytes, versus the breakdown of histamine by the enzymes which metabolize it, such as diamine oxidase and histamine N-methyltransferase.In contrast, allergic reactions involving an immediate allergic response to an allergen are caused by anaphylactic degranulation, which is the abrupt and explosive release of "pre-formed mediators", including histamine, from mast cells and basophils throughout the body.
Symptoms
Possible symptoms after ingestion of histamine-rich food include:- Skin rash, hives, eczema, itching
- Headache, flushing, migraine, dizziness
- Narrowed or runny nose, difficulty breathing, bronchial asthma, sore throat
- Bloating, diarrhea, constipation, nausea / vomiting, abdominal pain, stomach sticking, heartburn
- High blood pressure, tachycardia, cardiac arrhythmias, low blood pressure
- Menstrual disorders, cystitis, urethritis and mucosal irritation of female genitalia
- Water retention, bone marrow edema, joint pain
- Fatigue, seasickness, tiredness, sleep disorders
- Confusion, nervousness, depressive moods
Metabolism
Potentially harmful foods
The following food categories have been quoted in literature as histamine rich:Meat and fish
- Fish products, especially canned fish
- Ham
- Offal
- Pork
- Salami
- Smoked meat
- Other seafood
Dairy
- Matured cheeses - the higher degree of ripeness, the higher histamine content
Alcohol
- Beer
- Some French Champagne
- Red Wine
Fruits, vegetables, legumes and roots
- Avocado
- Bamboo sprouts
- Bananas
- Beans
- Citrus fruits
- Eggplant
- Figs
- Garlic
- Horseradish
- Mushrooms
- Papayas
- Plums
- Raisins
- Sauerkraut
- Spinach
- Strawberries
- Tomatoes
- Other molds
Other
- Chocolate
- Nuts
- Products with vinegar, such as pickles or mustard
- Soy and soy products
Drug interactions
- Some medicines or so-called histamine-liberators may delay the breakdown of histamine, or release histamine in the body.
- Alcohol consumption increases the permeability of the cell membrane and thus lowers the histamine tolerance limit, which is why particularly strong reactions can occur when mixing alcohol and histamine-rich foods.
- Incompatibility of anti-inflammatory and analgesic medications in persons with histamine intolerance:
- : Anti-inflammatory / analgesic drugs that increase allergen-specific histamine release in allergy sufferers are reaction inducing: List from page 125 in:
Active ingredient | Drugs containing the active ingredient |
Mefenamic acid | Parkemed |
Diclofenac | Dedolor, Deflamat, Diclo B, Diclobene, Diclomelan, Diclostad, Diclovit, Dolo-Neurobion, Neurofenac, Tratul, Voltaren |
Indometacin | Flexidin, Indobene, Indocid, Indohexal, Indomelan, Idometacin, Indoptol, Luiflex, Ralicid |
Acetyl salicylic acid | Aspirin |
List from page 126 in:
Active ingredient | Drugs containing the active ingredient |
Fenbufen | Lederfen |
Levamisole | Ergamisol |
Ibuprofen | Avallone, Brufen, Dismenol new, Dolgit, Ibudol, Ibumetin, Ibupron, Ibuprofen Genericon, Kratalgin, Nurofen, Tabcin, Ubumetin, Urem |
- Contrast agents – X-ray contrast allergy:
- : R. Jarisch: Contrast reaction is misleadingly referred to as allergy and, because contrast media contain iodine, is almost always mistaken for iodine allergy. "Contrast agents release histamine. The reason why, in most cases, nothing happens when administering contrast media is that most patients have no histamine intolerance. But if a patient reacts, anaphylactic shock is inevitable. "For safety reasons, an antihistamine should always be given to people with histamine intolerance prior to examination with an X-ray contrast medium. In addition, adherence to a histamine-free diet 24 hours before x-ray studies with contrast agents is recommended for minimizing histamine exposure. P. 127/128 in
Diagnosis
The diagnosis is usually made by intentionally provoking a reaction. However, since histamine can potentially cause life-threatening conditions, the following procedure is preferred: take blood samples before and after a 14-day diet, and measure changes in histamine and diamine oxidase levels. Rather than increase histamine during the test diet, eliminate it. This procedure does not endanger the patient. Quite the contrary: in the presence of histamine intolerance, the symptoms have improved or disappeared completely. At the same time, the histamine blood level halves and the DAO increases significantly. If there is no histamine intolerance, the blood levels do not change and neither do the symptoms. Simultaneously, food allergy, cross-reactions with pollen, fructose malabsorption, lactose intolerance, and celiac disease should be excluded.
Therapy
The basis of treatment is a reduction of the dietary histamine through a histamine-poor diet. An extreme variant is the "potato rice diet" that has been successfully used by dermatologists for decades in the treatment of hives, i.e. only potatoes, rice, salt, sugar and water. Certain foods and certain medicines which do not contain histamine per se are also to be avoided, because they are known to release histamine stored in the body.If eating histamine-containing foods is unavoidable, antihistamines and cromolyn sodium may be effective. The intake of diaminoxidase in capsule form with meals may reduce the symptoms of histamine intolerance.
In cases of high blood glutamate, such as can occur in some cases of eczema and histamine intolerance, Reinhart Jarisch recommends vitamin B6 treatment. This promotes the body's own synthesis of DAO and thus fights the effects of histamine intolerance. The reference ranges for blood glutamic acid are 20-107 in infants, 18-65 in children and 28-92 μmol / ml in adults.
Literature
- Abbot, Lieners, Mayer, Missbichler, Pfisterer, Schmutz: Nahrungsmittelunverträglichkeit . HSC, Mauerbach 2006,.
- Reinhart Jarisch: Histamin-Intoleranz, Histamin und Seekrankheit. Thieme 2004,.
- Nadja Schäfers: Histaminarm kochen – vegetarisch. pala-Verlag, Darmstadt 2009,.
- Anja Völkel: Gesunde Küche: bewusst genießen – schmackhaft & lecker. AVA-Verlag, 2013,.
- I. Reese: Streitthema Histaminintoleranz. In: Der Hautarzt. 65, 2014, S. 559–566, doi:10.1007/s00105-014-2815-2.