Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Peanut Allergy?


givenupgluten

Recommended Posts

givenupgluten Explorer

I had a blood test done awhile back - a celiac panel, but also my dr. wanted to check for food allergies, etc. On my report that I received in the mail, this is what it said re: peanuts....And I can't for the life of me understand it! Any help is appreciated. (By the way, I eat peanuts in some form every day, and don't have any allergic reaction that I'm aware of.....)

The results read like this:

Peanut IGE - .72 (High Range)..........(and my dr. circled this on the report)

Normal Range: <.35

Rast Interpretation: Out of Range - "2" - High

does this mean I'm allergic?? I realize I should ask my dr. about this, but my dr. is out of town for several weeks, so I'm trying to figure out if I should be avoiding peanuts....or if I'm having no reaction, then it's ok?


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



jerseyangel Proficient

I don't know what to tell you on the testing--I had a skin-prick test so I'm not familiar with yours.

What I would do is avoid peanuts until you can speak directly with your doctor, just to be safe. :)

jayhawkmom Enthusiast

I would avoid them until able to talk to your doctor. Do you eat them regularly??

My two younger children are allergic to peanuts and it's a LIFE threatening allergy. I would not mess around with elevated IgE levels to peanut protein.

MyMississippi Enthusiast

I want to caution you about food allergies: I have found that I became allergic to 2 foods that I ate OFTEN :o

Peanuts----- I was snacking on a LOT of peanuts everyday (kept a jar of them in my desk at work)

And WHEAT ----- I was baking whole wheat bread every week and eating it EVERY DAY

You might want to back off on the peanuts ---- eat them only about once a week (some say rotate, then you could eat them every 3 days)-----before one day you eat them and break out in hives :) ANd that will be the end of your peanut eating forever---

I think people with celiac disease don't process food proteins properly and hence the numerous food allergies.

as for the RAST results--- it looks like the NORMAL would be BELOW .35 and your results were . 72 (which is ABOVE the norm)

But check with your doc.

givenupgluten Explorer
I want to caution you about food allergies: I have found that I became allergic to 2 foods that I ate OFTEN :o

Peanuts----- I was snacking on a LOT of peanuts everyday (kept a jar of them in my desk at work)

And WHEAT ----- I was baking whole wheat bread every week and eating it EVERY DAY

You might want to back off on the peanuts ---- eat them only about once a week (some say rotate, then you could eat them every 3 days)-----before one day you eat them and break out in hives :) ANd that will be the end of your peanut eating forever---

I think people with celiac disease don't process food proteins properly and hence the numerous food allergies.

as for the RAST results--- it looks like the NORMAL would be BELOW .35 and your results were . 72 (which is ABOVE the norm)

But check with your doc.

I DO eat alot of peanuts/peanut butter....I eat a banana and peanut butter shake every morning AND I consume a decent amount of Thai food on occasion - with peanut sauces, etc. I'm also vegan, so this is a real set-back.....I was just hoping it was not a serious thing, but I will hold off until I speak with my dr. I definitely don't want to overdo it. Is it common to have no reactions (that I'm aware of) to something, and still be allergic to it?

MyMississippi Enthusiast

A true food allergy usually manifests itself with hives and itching a few minutes after you eat it.

I think your test results reflect that you could be headed toward a peanut allergy---- and that one day you might break out with the hives and itching if you continue to eat peanuts everyday ------- But I'm no allergy doctor ----- so what do I know ???? :lol:

I use Sunbutter in place of peanut butter ------- but I don't allow myself to have it everyday and I go months between jars of it----- (because of my allergy history )

jerseyangel Proficient

Can you sub almond butter in your shakes?


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



jayhawkmom Enthusiast
A true food allergy usually manifests itself with hives and itching a few minutes after you eat it.

I think your test results reflect that you could be headed toward a peanut allergy---- and that one day you might break out with the hives and itching if you continue to eat peanuts everyday ------- But I'm no allergy doctor ----- so what do I know ???? :lol:

I use Sunbutter in place of peanut butter ------- but I don't allow myself to have it everyday and I go months between jars of it----- (because of my allergy history )

I agree here. If you are eating it, and not having problems at current.... you might want to taper off on your consumption in an effort to ward off any possible reactions. My kids react immediately....and violently. That's how we identified their allergies, initially. What a nightmare.

Anyhow... I also use Sunbutter, since I love peanut butter but can't have it in the house.

ShayFL Enthusiast

IgE is the antibody that is related to anaphalactic, wheezing, excema and the like. Right now you are "tolerating" it, but you can bet there is a cut off point. And with this type of allergy antibody, there is no way of knowing what that cut off is (2 tlb, 3 tlb of PB?) OR if your body will decide one day "enough is enough"!! And one peanut sends you to the ER.

Rotating might be a horrible idea in that when you remove an allergen (even for 4 days) the subsequent reaction can be EXTREME compared to when you were eating it regularly.

I wouldnt play with this one. PLEASE talk to your doctor as soon as you can. You may need to keep an Epi pen on you at all times.

April in KC Apprentice

Hi, I'm very familiar with peanut allergy, as my son has had this allergy for 6 years & now has anaphylactic reactions to peanut. It looks like you had a RAST test for peanut, which is a blood test that would measure your peanut-specific levels of immunoglobulin E, or IGE. On paper, it looks like you have a RAST Class 2 peanut allergy (there are six classes, with 6 being the highest). I say "on paper," because it sounds like you're eating them without incident.

If I were you, I'd go to see a board certified allergist. Take a copy of your blood test results with you and indicate that you have been eating peanuts regularly. You can probably do a peanut butter eating challenge there in the office to help determine that you are not having any reaction to peanut. They might repeat the RAST test or opt to do a skin prick test as well - allergist rely on both methods to help determine allergy. In the end, if you're not reacting at all, they may call it a false positive RAST. But if they decide that you're allergic, you should ALWAYS carry an Epi-Pen or Twinject with you. Allergic reactions can change over time, and it could save your life someday.

If you are having any ongoing GI issues, consider whether peanuts could be playing a role. It's unusual but not unheard of for an IGE type allergy to cause GI symptoms without hives. My son is this way for soy, which was RAST Class 3 positive for.

Come visit a peanut allergy community at alllergy.hyperboards.com if you want to talk to some folks about the test results. It's mostly parents of peanut allergic kids, but there are some adults and teens there with the allergy, too.

Jestgar Rising Star
But if they decide that you're allergic, you should ALWAYS carry an Epi-Pen or Twinject with you. Allergic reactions can change over time, and it could save your life someday.

What she said

givenupgluten Explorer

Thank you everyone for your help! I appreciate it. I will definitely take the advice and consult my dr. about it when he returns, as well as seeing an allergist just to be safe. Thanks again!

hawaiimama Apprentice

That is very scary and I agree that taking it out to test it is not what you want to do.

Janessa Rookie

I used to eat peanuts everyday too with "no symptoms"

Then I stopped eating them for a while and when I started eating them again I noticed I had trouble breathing after and since I have stopped eating them altogether my asthma attacks that happened about twice a week for years stopped completely

Sometimes you don't realize your symptoms until they go away

Amyleigh0007 Enthusiast

My son has a Class 3 peanut allergy according to the RAST. April explained the RAST test perfectly. While he has never had anaphylactic reaction he does have reactions. Most of his reactions are internal. He very rarely gets rashes or hives on the outside. All of his reactions have been internal. He gets rashes and hives on his esophagus. So, please don't assume that if you aren't having outward reactions that peanuts are safe for you. You might be having internal reactions and you wouldn't know it.

April in KC Apprentice

I have watched as my son progressed from RAST class 2 to class 6. His peanut specific IGE is >100 kU/DL. IGE antibodies takes a long time to go away (years), they say. Only 20% of people with peanut allergy ever outgrow it. It took a jump from class 3 to class 6 after he had his first anaphylactic reaction in preschool.

The way his allergist explained it, the RAST class does not predict how someone is going to react NEXT time they have a reaction...instead it is more like a marker of what has happened to them in the past. I always want people with allergy at RAST class 2 or 3 to be aware that the next reaction could be different, or more sudden or serious, than what has happened in the past. At the time DS had his worst reaction, he was at RAST class 3 and had only had a few minor incidents involving hives--never anything that seemed too scary. So the anaphylactic potential can be there, even when past reactions have not gone that way.

There are some really cool studies and projects going on with peanut allergy right now. Duke University has a program where they build up tolerance to peanuts using pharmaceutical doses of peanut protein (they start with 2 mg...a standard peanut is 150-300 mg). Some of the kids in the program who used to react to less than 1/10 of a peanut are now (after 2 years) eating the equivalent of 8 peanuts per day. My son is not eligible for the program yet, but it gives me some hope.

Interesting for the original poster, in the Duke study, they have the kids in the program continue to eat a "maintenance" dose of peanut protein after they build up their tolerance over time.

There's also a promising treatment on the horizon that is based on a formula used in Traditional Chinese Medicine. It's code name is FAHF-2 if anyone cares to look it up. Perhaps some day our peanut allergic loved ones will be able to take a shot or a pill that will prevent anaphylaxis. That's what FAHF-2 does in mice. Gotta love it.

veggienft Rookie

Gluten intolerant people, including celiacs, should appreciate :rolleyes: peanut "allergy".

Celiac disease and its gliadin autoimmune reaction have been recognized and studied for many decades. More is known about celiac disease than most other autoimmune diseases. Almost from its discovery celiac disease has been associated with its cause.

Celiac is caused when people with specific genetic patterns recognize wheat glycoprotein as invading antigens. Their immune systems attack the glycoprotein and all the tissue it touches.

Bacteria and virus attack the human body using singular genetic signatures which give them unique footholds. Fungi do not attack singularly. Fungi exist in spore colonies with hundreds of genetic signatures. Fungi propagate from the spores who's genetics give them an attacking foothold.

Candida albicans fungus produces a range of chemicals which are toxic to humans. As it turns out candida randomly produces protein which mimics wheat glycoprotein. A dominant theory says the celiac reaction to wheat is a mis-directed reaction to candida fungus. It makes lots of sense. Any animal who's body self-destructs upon eating normal food can't survive to reproduce. Conversely, any animal who succumbs to fungal attack can't survive to reproduce.

Like wheat gliadin, nut proteins are glycoprotein. Glycoprotein are hybrid proteins, part protein, part sugar (glyco) .......meaning they have an oxygen/hydrogen (OH) unit bonded to their carbon chains. The combination gives glycoprotein the ability to connect to membranes perpendicularly, just as many body proteins and lipids do.

Early 20 th century agricultural and medical sciences identified the fungus Aspergillus flavus as a disease-causing agent in peanuts, other nuts and ground-based carbohydrate crops. Aspergillus flavus produces "aflatoxin", a toxin so dangerous that aflatoxin weapons programs have been attempted. That doesn't mean humans don't normally ingest aflatoxin. On average humans ingest and handle trace amounts of aflatoxin regularly.

Peanuts grow in the ground, where growing conditions can cause blossoming aflatoxin outbreaks.

Without chemical analysis, aflatoxin is unrecognizable in crops. Aflatoxin cannot be destroyed by cooking. Chemical sampling shows that peanut crops which display higher levels of rot also have higher levels of aflatoxin. After aflatoxin was identified as a problem, U.S. farmers formed state and county co-ops to examine peanut crops and destroy those with more rot. But some farmers whose crops were destroyed successfully sued, and removed this valuable tool.

Food production has turned into a global operation. Like other crops peanuts, even healthy peanuts, get dumped into freight containers with contaminated peanuts. They get shipped and stored in these hot moist conditions for weeks on end. Aspergillus spreads in such conditions.

Peanut "allergies" have absolutely blossomed in the last couple of decades. All doctors are sworn public health officials. It is not in the public interest to cause panic over the public food supply. But quietly there's a theory gaining ground in medical circles. The current peanut autoimmune outbreak is, like the wheat autoimmune reaction, actually a reaction to a mixing of fungus and peanut glycoprotein.

The immune systems of susceptible people recognize Aspergillus and associated peanut glycoprotein as a single invading antigen.

..

givenupgluten Explorer

Thanks to everyone for responding..I appreciate all the input. I was actually able to get in touch with my dr. yesterday, and he brought it up. He stated that I was allergic to peanuts, and that I should definitely cut it out of my diet. He felt like cutting them out could be the tipping point - the difference in feeling good about 70% of the time on a gluten free diet, with few hiccups along the way..and feeling 100% better.

April in KC Apprentice

Wow. You can always visit a second allergist down the road for additional testing if you're really not convinced. Unlike gluten, peanut IGE antibodies should hang around for quite a long time even after you remove peanuts from your diet...one of the reasons PA is hard to outgrow.

Good luck with the new dietary steps...I know PA can be very restrictive at times...not so restrictive as gluten-free, but it's just one more limitation when you probably don't want one. There are some great PA online support groups.

If you do become symptomatic, pay attention to the "may contain peanuts" and "processed in a facility with..." labels, since they tend to represent real risk of cross-contam.

Get an Epi and carry it (don't leave it in a hot car). If it isn't ever needed to save your life, that's great...maybe you can be someone else's hero someday at a restaurant! I seem to remember a case where a person with an Epi saved someone's life on a beach one time.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,391
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Salt14
    Newest Member
    Salt14
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • trents
    • Clear2me
      Thanks for the info. I recently moved to CA from Wyoming and in that western region the Costco and Sam's /Walmart Brands have many nuts and more products that are labeled gluten free. I was told it's because those products are packaged and processed  in different  plants. Some plants can be labeled  gluten free because the plant does not also package gluten products and they know that for example the trucks, containers equipment are not used to handle wheat, barely or Rye. The Walmart butter in the western region says gluten free but not here. Most of The Kirkland and Members Mark brands in CA say they are from Vietnam. That's not the case in Wyoming and Colorado. I've spoken to customer service at the stores here in California. They were not helpful. I check labels every time I go to the store. The stores where I am are a Sh*tshow. The Magalopoly grocery chain Vons/Safeway/Albertsons, etc. are the same. Fishers and Planters brands no longer say gluten free. It could be regional. There are nuts with sugar coatings and fruit and nut mixes at the big chains that are labeled gluten free but I don't want the fruit or sugar.  It's so difficult I am considering moving again. I thought it would be easier to find safe food in a more populated area. It's actually worse.  I was undiagnosed for most of my life but not because I didn't try to figure it out. So I have had all the complications possible. I don't have any spare organs left.  No a little gluten will hurt you. The autoimmune process continues to destroy your organs though you may not feel it. If you are getting a little all the time and as much as we try we probably all are and so the damage is happening. Now the FDA has pretty much abandoned celiacs. There are no requirements for labeling for common allergens on medications. All the generic drugs made outside the US are not regulated for common allergens and the FDA is taking the last gluten free porcine Thyroid med, NP Thyroid, off the market in 2026. I was being glutened by a generic levothyroxin. The insurance wouldn't pay for the gluten free brand any longer because the FDA took them all off their approved formulary. So now I am paying $147 out of pocket for NP Thyroid but shortly I will have no safe choice. Other people with allergies should be aware that these foreign generic pharmaceutical producers are using ground shellfish shell as pill coatings and anti-desicants. The FDA knows this but  now just waits for consumers to complain or die. The take over of Wholefoods by Amazon destroyed a very reliable source of good high quality food for people with allergies and for people who wanted good reliably organic food. Bezos thought  he could make a fortune off people who were paying alot for organic and allergen free food by substituting cheap brands from Thailand. He didn't understand who the customers were who were willing to pay more for that food and why. I went from spending hundreds to nothing because Bezo removed every single trusted brand that I was buying. Now they are closing Whole foods stores across the country. In CA, Mill Valley store (closed July 2025) and the National Blvd. store in West Los Angeles (closed October 2025). The Cupertino store will close.  In recent years I have learned to be careful and trust no one. I have been deleberately glutened in a restaurant that was my favorite (a new employee). The Chef owner was not in the kitchen that night. I've had  a metal scouring pad cut up over my food.The chain offered gluten free dishes but it only takes one crazy who thinks you're a problem as a food fadist. Good thing I always look. Good thing they didn't do that to food going to a child with a busy mom.  I give big tips and apologize for having to ask in restaurants but mental illness seem to be rampant. I've learn the hard way.          I don't buy any processed food that doesn't say gluten free.  I am a life long Catholic. I worked for the Church while at college. I don't go to Church anymore because the men at the top decided Jesus is gluten. The special hosts are gluten less not gluten free. No I can't drink wine after people with gluten in their mouth and a variety of deadly germs. I have been abandoned and excluded by my Church/Family.  Having nearly died several times, safe food is paramount. If your immune system collapses as mine did, you get sepsis. It can kill you very quickly. I spent 5 days unconscious and had to have my appendix and gall bladder removed because they were necrotic. I was 25. They didn't figure out I had celiac till I was 53. No one will take the time to tell you what can happen when your immune system gets overwhelmed from its constant fighting the gluten and just stops. It is miserable that our food is processed so carelessly. Our food in many aspects is not safe. And the merging of all the grocery chains has made it far worse. Its a disaster. Krogers also recently purchased Vitacost where I was getting the products I could no longer get at Whole Foods. Kroger is eliminating those products from Vitacost just a Bezos did from WF. I am looking for reliable and certified sources for nuts. I have lived the worst consequences of the disease and being exposed unknowingly and maliciously. Once I was diagnosed I learned way more than anyone should have to about the food industry.  I don't do gray areas. And now I dont eat out except very rarely.  I have not eaten fast food for 30 years before the celiac diagnosis. Gluten aside..... It's not food and it's not safe.  No one has got our backs. Sharing safe food sources is one thing we can do to try to be safe.        
    • Mmoc
      Thank you kindly for your response. I have since gotten the other type of bloods done and am awaiting results. 
    • Aretaeus Cappadocia
      I wanted to respond to your post as much for other people who read this later on (I'm not trying to contradict your experience or decisions) > Kirkland Signature Super Extra-Large Peanuts, 2.5 lbs, are labeled "gluten free" in the Calif Costcos I've been in. If they are selling non-gluten-free in your store, I suggest talking to customer service to see if they can get you the gluten-free version (they are tasty) > This past week I bought "Sliced Raw Almonds, Baking Nuts, 5 lbs Item 1495072 Best if used by Jun-10-26 W-261-6-L1A 12:47" at Costco. The package has the standard warning that it was made on machinery that <may> have processed wheat. Based on that alone, I would not eat these. However, I contacted customer service and asked them "are Costco's Sliced Almonds gluten free?" Within a day I got this response:  "This is [xyz] with the Costco Member Service Resolutions Team. I am happy to let you know we got a reply back from our Kirkland Signature team. Here is their response:  This item does not have a risk of cross contamination with gluten, barley or rye." Based on this, I will eat them. Based on experience, I believe they will be fine. Sometimes, for other products, the answer has been "they really do have cross-contamination risk" (eg, Kirkland Signature Dry Roasted Macadamia Nuts, Salted, 1.5 lbs Item 1195303). When they give me that answer I return them for cash. You might reasonably ask, "Why would Costco use that label if they actually are safe?" I can't speak for Costco but I've worked in Corporate America and I've seen this kind of thing first hand and up close. (1) This kind of regulatory label represents risk/cost to the company. What if they are mistaken? In one direction, the cost is loss of maybe 1% of sales (if celiacs don't buy when they would have). In the other direction, the risk is reputational damage and open-ended litigation (bad reviews and celiacs suing them). Expect them to play it safe. (2) There is a team tasked with getting each product out to market quickly and cheaply, and there is also a committee tasked with reviewing the packaging before it is released. If the team chooses the simplest, safest, pre-approved label, this becomes a quick check box. On the other hand, if they choose something else, it has to be carefully scrutinized through a long process. It's more efficient for the team to say there <could> be risk. (3) There is probably some plug and play in production. Some lots of the very same product could be made in a safe facility while others are made in an unsafe facility. Uniform packaging (saying there is risk) for all packages regardless of gluten risk is easier, cheaper, and safer (for Costco). Everything I wrote here is about my Costco experience, but the principles will be true at other vendors, particularly if they have extensive quality control infrastructure. The first hurdle of gluten-free diet is to remove/replace all the labeled gluten ingredients. The second, more difficult hurdle is to remove/replace all the hidden gluten. Each of us have to assess gray zones and make judgement calls knowing there is a penalty for being wrong. One penalty would be getting glutened but the other penalty could be eating an unnecessarily boring or malnourishing diet.
    • trents
      Thanks for the thoughtful reply and links, Wheatwacked. Definitely some food for thought. However, I would point out that your linked articles refer to gliadin in human breast milk, not cow's milk. And although it might seem reasonable to conclude it would work the same way in cows, that is not necessarily the case. Studies seem to indicate otherwise. Studies also indicate the amount of gliadin in human breast milk is miniscule and unlikely to cause reactions:  https://www.glutenfreewatchdog.org/news/gluten-peptides-in-human-breast-milk-implications-for-cows-milk/ I would also point out that Dr. Peter Osborne's doctorate is in chiropractic medicine, though he also has studied and, I believe, holds some sort of certifications in nutritional science. To put it plainly, he is considered by many qualified medical and nutritional professionals to be on the fringe of quackery. But he has a dedicated and rabid following, nonetheless.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.