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

Histamine Intolerance In Celiac Sufferers


Marz

Recommended Posts

Marz Enthusiast

I have quite a mysterious problem, in addition to the normal GI issues I've been having.

I've self-diagnosed that I'm intolerant to histamine in any form, as well as foods that tend to stimulate the release of histamine directly from Mast cells (specific cells involved in the immune reaction).

My symptoms are severe headaches, sinus pain, extreme "tooth-ache" that radiates into the sinuses, and frequent sinus infections.

Basically, if I eat a large slab of chocolate, within a day or two I'm guaranteed to come down with a cold/sinus infection.

If I eat an Avo, I'm guaranteed to get a severe headache or sinus/tooth-ache within a few hours.

I seem to tolerate cheese, however, which should be high in histamine...

From my research, I've found that it's caused in 2 ways - either the person lacks a specific enzyme (Diamine oxidase) secreted on the intestinal wall (And you can see where I'm going with this :) ), or the person is deficient in a cellular enzyme elsewhere (Histidase), which decomposes the histamine within the blood.

Open Original Shared Link

Open Original Shared Link

I'm very interested to hear if anyone had histamine-overdose reactions after eating the big culprits - Cheese, Chocolate, Wine - and if it got better on a gluten-free diet. I would love to be able to eat chocolate again without getting sick!


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



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



ravenwoodglass Mentor

In my case, and I was very far along as far as celiac goes, when I had allergy testing done before diagnosis I showed an allergic reaction to all but one of the 99 things I was tested for. That prompted my allergist to put me on the elimination diet and I was finally on the road to my celiac diagnosis.

For me after a time gluten free almost all those allergies resolved. The allergist said my immune system was in hyperdrive and that was why I was reacting to everything. After the gluten free diet calmed down my immune system the 'allergies' resolved.

Spudz Newbie

Considering the sequence of events that resulted in my doctor suspecting gluten-intolerance, I found your post interesting. Over the years, I had gradually reduced my consumption of grain products. I incorrectly interpreted my adverse reactions to eating refined grain products, and didn't consider the gluten component. But, after reduced symptoms during an anti-inflammatory detox which eliminated gluten, I reacted badly to wheat and rye during the subsequent food challenge. As a result, I returned to eating only the foods allowed during the detox. After several weeks of "clean" eating, I ate a fast-food pita wrap (which in addition to a high-gluten content also contained many fermented foods) and experienced a return of digestive problems plus a few new symptoms: flushing, intensely itchy hands and feet and a rash on all skin exposed to natural light. A search on the internet led me to consider some sort of mast cell disorder.

My doctor suggested trying antihistamines as an easy way to determine whether excess histamine might be involved in my new symptoms. It was at this appointment my doctor requisitioned a celiac disease screen (no results yet).

I skimmed through the two websites you attached, thanks. I react adversely to at least some of the high-histamine foods -- some cheeses, chocolate, shellfish, etc., but didn't make the connection while still eating gluten because my symptoms were chronic. Of particular note, I am hypersensitive to food preservatives (sulphites, benzoates, etc.) and have never tolerated alcohol (fortunately not a problem since I've never enjoyed beer, wine or spirits). I've been back on a gluten-free diet for 10 days now after eating gluten at every meal before testing. So far, the intense "histamine" symptoms I experienced after eating the high-gluten, high-histamine pita wrap are significantly less. I can't say for sure if this improvement can be attributed to the gluten-free diet, or whether taking one regular-strength Reactine per day is also helping. I suspect it may be a bit of both. I can say that eating gluten-free has reduced my previously industrial-strength headaches.

I, too, would love to eat chocolate (and cheese) without feeling worse afterwards. Due to my numerous auto-immune illnesses, it seems my diet is becoming increasingly restricted. I guess I could say I'm currently eating a "Scratch-prepared, low-GI, low-acid, low-histamine, low-purine, anti-inflammatory, gluten-free diet". Yikes!

Have you tried "dry skin brushing" for your sinus problems? This was recommended to me by a naturopath, and it really seems to help clean out the sinuses. If interested, check the internet for instructions. Best of luck, Marz.

Skylark Collaborator

Both my dad and I don't tolerate red wine very well. Histamine and sulfites is a nasty mix for folks with allergies and asthma!

Marz Enthusiast

I guess I could say I'm currently eating a "Scratch-prepared, low-GI, low-acid, low-histamine, low-purine, anti-inflammatory, gluten-free diet". Yikes!

Wow, hopefully once your gut has healed (if that is the problem), your diet can become less restrictive.

Have you tried "dry skin brushing" for your sinus problems?

Yikes, sounds scary, but I'll check it out. The sinus problems aren't too bad, maybe a sick day off work once a month or so.

If gluten is the problem, and these are your initial symptoms, I'd definately recommend staying off gluten. This histamine intolerance was the first symptom for me, and from there it went downhill over a period of a few years. I'm now definately "intolerant" to chicken and turkey - very, very bad stomach problems between 2 hours to a day or so after eating it. Then even after cutting out fowl, I started getting random GI issues from then on. I can't believe that a few years ago I was happily pigging out on anything and everything I could see, with no sinus/headache/GI issues.

Good luck to you too with sorting out your issues :)

gf-soph Apprentice

I saw my dietician yesterday, and she has put me on a low chemical diet, that is, low in amines, salicylates and glutamate (as well as preservatives, articifical sweeteners and general processed junk). These are the three food chemical groups that the RPA (Royal Prince Alfred Hospital) elimination diet targets. They way it is viewed is that there are varying amounts of these chemicals in certain foods. Everyone has a certain tolerance for the chemicals, and these chemicals build up in your system over time.

If you have an amine problem you have a certain tolerance for them. If you eat a little chocolate one day you may be fine, but if you eat a little chocolate, then the next day have some cheese, then over time you can reach your limit by having combinations of the problem foods. If you are highly sensitive you may reach your limit after a single small serve.

I don't have allergies but I can get terrible face flushing with nasty headache after eating some foods (especially MSG, mono sodium *glutamate*) and maybe salicylates, and this only goes down with antihistamines. So I too am getting interested in the histamine issue.

My dietician is trainined on how to use this specific elimination diet. She thinks that I am generally chemically sensitive, as most of my regular foods are high in problem chemicals (tomatoes, avocado, goats cheese and berries are now off the menu).

It could be worth a look if you are interested.

edit - amine levels in cheese depend on the type - cheese like ricotta and cottage cheese are fairly low, basic mild cheese like tasty are medium, while aged cheeses like cheddars and brie are much higher. You also get higher amines in cured or old meat, which may be something to look out for.

Archived

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

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - TheDHhurts posted a topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      0

      need help understanding testing result for Naked Nutrition Creatine please

    2. - cristiana replied to hjayne19's topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      14

      Insomnia help

    3. - wellthatsfun posted a topic in Post Diagnosis, Recovery & Treatment of Celiac Disease
      0

      nothing has changed

    4. - trents replied to Charlie1946's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      48

      Severe severe mouth pain

    5. - Charlie1946 replied to Charlie1946's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      48

      Severe severe mouth pain

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      133,106
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    Maggie1349
    Newest Member
    Maggie1349
    Joined
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m
  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):
  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • TheDHhurts
      Hi, I bought Naked Nutrition Creatine. It lists itself as gluten free but is not certified. (It used to be, but they dropped it in the past year or two apparently.) I wrote the company and asked them what testing results they had for creatine and they sent me the attached, which says the test result for gluten is <0.025MCG. I'm used to seeing test results as ppm, so I'm not sure what <0.025MCG means. Can it be converted to ppm easily? I want to confirm that it is safe to use.
    • cristiana
      When I was still recovering my gastroenterologist suggested I bought lactofree product as I was very bloated.  So I bought some from the supermarket and from memory, I drank a nice big glass of milk - and it went right through me literally within an hour or so, if my memory serves correctly.  I came off dairy completely next and it worked like a charm, but started to reintroduce quite gradually it as I missed it! To this day, if I overdo dairy products, they work like a mild laxative.  I've never wanted to give up milk completely as I like it so much, and my mum had osteoporosis and it's an easy way of getting calcium.  But it doesn't really 'sit' well with me.   You may need to experiment a bit as when I was healing certain dairy products were worse than others - I could cope with one brand of Greek yoghurt, but I got extremely and painfully bloated with another brand of live British yoghurt.  
    • wellthatsfun
      i have been strictly gluten free for 7 months. this includes avoiding anything that may contain gluten and making sure surfaces and appliances are clean. i am 18 years old in australia and my tTG-IgA results were 69U/mL, pretty low compared to most people's, for reference. i feel the exact same as before. sure, i was pretty much asymptomatic/silent. the worst i'd get was occasionally bad stools and pitting of the nails/brittle hair since early childhood - and i was diagnosed with low iron and vitamin d which checks out due to easy bruising and such. but those symptoms have remained. maybe i'm jumping the gun, sure. i know it can take years to fully heal. but being over half a year in, i feel that i should be, y'know, healing. i'm nearly at my wits end and wondering if i should have a piece of bread or something to see how i go - to see if i possibly have refractory? my mental health is declining as i feel myself wanting to bang my head against a damn wall out of frustration every day. cravings haven't gotten better. look, i love the stuff i still can have, like salads and such. OH! i haven't lost any weight, which is mind boggling considering i eat very healthily now! i've always been on the chubbier side which is atypical of coeliac. i just don't know what's going on with me. i try to remain hopeful but i'm just so sad all the time. thanks for reading  
    • trents
      @Charlie1946There is a PM (Personal Message) tool built into the forum website that allows you to send a private message to other forum users. Just hover over their name with your mouse cursor and the menu containing that tool will pop up. This is useful if you want to communicate with an individual without everyone else involved in the thread seeing it.  Are you realizing that in my PPI taper down recommendations in an earlier post above, I was responding not to your posts but to @Caligirl57? If you must use a PPI, I certainly would advise taking the lowest dose that is effective for you.  
    • Charlie1946
      Hi everyone, I'm still trying to figure out how to each message individually. I saw one with some information on sebaceous hyperplasia but now I can't find it. I appreciate you all so much for all your responses and advice! God bless! Hi everyone, I'm still trying to figure out how to each message individually. I saw one with some information on sebaceous hyperplasia but now I can't find it. I appreciate you all so much for all your responses and advice! God bless! Hi everyone, I'm still trying to figure out how to each message individually. I saw one with some information on sebaceous hyperplasia but now I can't find it. I appreciate you all so much for all your responses and advice! God bless! Hi everyone, I'm still trying to figure out how to each message individually. I saw one with some information on sebaceous hyperplasia but now I can't find it. I appreciate you all so much for all your responses and advice! God bless! Hi everyone, I'm still trying to figure out how to each message individually. I saw one with some information on sebaceous hyperplasia but now I can't find it. I appreciate you all so much for all your responses and advice! God bless!
×
×
  • 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.