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MENTAL ILLNESS OR ALLERGY?

_http://wholeapproach.com/newsletter/pop200304.html_

(http://wholeapproach.com/newsletter/pop200304.html)

by Tari-Lee Cornish,

Nutritional Consultant

 

When most of us think of allergy, we think of common symptoms such as

sneezing, itchy eyes, hives, asthma and nausea. These are all immediate

physical reactions but there are many different types of allergic responses

possible. Some reactions take several days to show up, and some allergies don't

necessarily affect the respiratory system, digestive tract or skin.

 

Did you know that food and/or chemical allergies can create emotional,

behavioural and mental symptoms such as panic attacks, compulsive behavior,

depression, psychotic episodes, or hallucinations? They can also contribute to

many

less severe mental and emotional symptoms such as anxiety, irritability,

inability to concentrate, or feelings of being in a mental " fog " . A surprising

number of people have been able to eliminate such troubling symptoms simply by

removing the allergens from their diet or living environment.

 

Such allergies are more likely to be present in Candida overgrowth

sufferers, because of Candida's destructive impact on the integrity of the

body's

tissues and functions. The good news is that it's usually possible to identify

and treat allergies that cause mental and emotional symptoms.

 

A MEDICAL CONTROVERSY

 

Brain allergy or ecological mental illness is a general term used to

describe any abnormal reaction to a food or other substance that creates

psychological, emotional, or neurological symptoms. The existence of brain

allergy is

widely disputed by many mainstream allergists, even though numerous other

researchers and doctors have been convinced since the early 1900s that some

individuals can be mentally impaired by exposure to certain foods or chemicals.

 

Indeed, the abnormal reactions involved in brain allergy have been

documented in medical literature for over a century. Since the 1950s, an

appreciation

of the intimate connection between mental and physical health has been

gradually gaining momentum and with that has come an increase in clinical

studies

in the area. As the convincing clinical evidence begins to make the case

clearer and clearer, awareness and acceptance of brain allergies among orthodox

physicians and psychiatrists has continued to grow, albeit very slowly.

 

THE DEFINITION OF AN ALLERGY

 

To understand why these types of allergies are not well recognized, it's

necessary to understand the point of view of most conventional allergists.

These

practitioners have a very specific definition of allergy.

 

The technical term " allergy " originated over one hundred years ago-doctors

then used it to describe any abnormal physiological reaction to any material.

The meaning of the term in mainstream medicine of today has become

considerably narrower. The commonly known " scratch test " was the first medical

allergy

test developed. It was established to measure one very specific immune

antibody reaction only.

 

This test identifies a type of reaction called the IgE antibody reaction.

For many years, it was the only allergy test used. As time went on this test

became well known for its ability to accurately predict certain types of

adverse reactions to substances. In an attempt to provide an absolute

scientific

explanation for the mystery of allergies, the orthodox medical definition of

an allergy evolved to match the reactions that this test could confirm.

Unfortunately as many allergy sufferers are aware, this test offers many false

negatives.

 

The orthodox definition of an allergy that involves an IgE antibody reaction

assumes that allergic reactions involve a specific function of the immune

system, and does not acknowledge delayed reactions or reactions involving any

other system of the body. Because of the limitations of this definition,

allergic reactions affecting the central nervous system (`ecological mental

illness' or `brain allergies'), have not been recognized as allergies because

there

was no evidence that the immune system was directly involved in causing the

symptoms associated with these reactions.

 

However, research now shows that nervous system reactions are measurable and

involve chemicals released by one or all three different body systems: our

endocrine system, our nervous system and immune system. Orthomolecular

physicians and clinical ecologists reject IgE scratch testing, claiming it is

able

to confirm only a mere 15% of allergies.

 

Syd Baumel, author of Dealing with Depression Naturally, describes the

debate as follows: " the narrow, orthodox definition of allergy is that it is an

immunologic reaction, almost always triggered by a protein and confined to the

superficial tissues of the body (the skin, the respiratory system, or the

digestive tract). Clinical ecologists, however, maintain that any food,

chemical

or material is capable of triggering an adverse reaction in any organ of the

body, with or without the help of the immune system. "

 

Today, the myth-shattering discoveries of orthomolecular physicians and

clinical ecologists are beginning to affect change in the attitudes of

mainstream

allergists as they raise awareness of brain allergies. These experts have

been very successful in treating all kinds of mental and emotional illness by

helping their patients identify, avoid and manage allergic reactions.

 

MEDICAL RECOGNITION OF BRAIN ALLERGIES

 

After some convincing research conducted in the mid-1900s began to confirm

the existence of nervous system allergic reactions, the education of the

medical community began. One of the first public seminars on the subject was

held

at a scientific exhibit at the Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric

Association in 1956. After this presentation, the Section on Allergy of the

Nervous System of the American College of Allergists was founded in 1957 and

the

condition was formally named ecologic mental illness in 1959. Theron

Randolph, M.D. and four other practitioners organized the Society for Clinical

Ecology in 1965. By 1980 this society had grown to 250 members. This

organization

has since evolved into the American Academy of Environmental Medicine and

offers courses in the techniques and principles of this field. It hosts annual

scientific meetings to further research and education and publishes the

peer-reviewed journal Environmental Medicine (formerly Clinical Ecology! ).

 

SYMPTOMS ASSOCIATED WITH BRAIN ALLERGIES

 

The orthomolecular/ecology-minded practitioners have found that a huge

spectrum of mental and emotional symptoms can be triggered by allergies,

including

agitation, anxiety, compulsions, lack of concentration, brain fog,

confusion, weepiness, delirium, delusion, depression, disorientation,

drowsiness,

epilepsy, hallucinations, hyperactivity, hyper-arousal episodes (i.e.

palpitations, sweating, trembling), hypersensitivity, hysteria, impatience,

insomnia,

irritability, jumpiness, lethargy, mania, mental slowness, mental fogginess,

nightmares, panic, paranoia, psychoses, rage, restlessness, and tension-fatigue

syndrome.

 

One mechanism by which a food allergy can cause changes to the personality,

reflexes, motor activity, and central nervous system is through swelling or

edema of specific sections of the brain.

 

The most common symptoms experienced by brain allergy sufferers are

depression and brain fog. Many well respected studies have also revealed that

schizophrenia may be an allergy-related illness. These three conditions are

discussed in more detail below.

 

BRAIN FOG

 

Theron G. Randolph, M.D., and Ralph W. Moss, Ph.D. describe brain fog in

their book, An Alternative Approach to Allergies. The authors say brain fog is

" a form of mental fatigue, a much more serious and debilitating symptom than

physical tiredness. Brain-fog is characterized by mental confusion, slowness

of thought, lack of initiative and ambition, irritability, occasional loss of

sex drive, despondency, as well as bodily fatigue, weakness and aching. " Dr

Randolph goes on to say that it is common for patients suffering from these

symptoms to be inappropriately treated with mood-altering drugs, electroshock

therapy, and psychotherapy.

 

DEPRESSION

 

Dr. Randolph also states that depression, especially when associated with

other symptoms of allergy, may very well be due to food allergy. He has been

proving this relationship in his practice since the 1950s. He has seen

life-long cases of depression cured after the elimination of allergens.

 

Dr. James C. Breneman, chairman of the Food Allergy Committee of the

American College of Allergists, states in his 1984 textbook on food allergy

that

brain allergy is a common cause of everything from " poor concentration and

neurosis to epilepsy and schizophrenia. "

 

Abram Hoffer, M.D., says that depression and allergy are often experienced

simultaneously: " When one is relieved, so is the other. Treatment of the

allergy will, in most cases, cure' the depression. I have seen this in several

hundred patients over the past six years and can no longer doubt this

conclusion " .

 

Dr. C. Keith Conners, a leading expert on hyperactivity, used capsules of

food allergens to provoke mental and behavioural symptoms in nine out of ten

adults who had already shown to be susceptible to allergies to these

substances. The placebos used on the same group had no such effects.

 

SCHIZOPHRENIA

 

In their book Food Allergies Made Simple, medical doctors Agatha and Calvin

Thrash and co-author Phyllis Austin cite a convincing study: " [A study in

which] two groups of schizophrenics admitted to a psychiatric ward and placed

on

different diets, revealed that those placed on the cereal-free, milk-free

diet improved more quickly and were discharged from the hospital in half the

time of the group given the standard diet. " Gluten was determined to be the

prominent allergen. Thrash, Thrash, and Austin explain that many patients with

celiac disease also have psychiatric symptoms, that these improve when a

gluten free diet is introduced and that the combination of milk protein with

wheat

gluten appears to worsen the effect of wheat gluten in some people.

 

These authors also observe that " Schizophrenia is rare in areas of the world

where little or no cereal grains are used and more frequent in countries

where wheat, rye or barley are commonly used. " They cite two more interesting

studies, one of which concluded that 80 percent of people with schizophrenia

tested allergic to eggs. They also noted that caffeine can have a significant

worsening effect on schizophrenia.

 

FOOD ADDITION, FOOD ALLERGIES, OVEREATING

 

A number of clinical ecologists and orthomolecular physicians have observed

that the foods we crave most are also often the foods we are most likely to

be allergic to. Paradoxically, eating a food to which we are allergic can

temporarily mask or inhibit our allergic response, offering short term relief

from our symptoms. But if we avoid an allergen for several days, our

sensitivity

to the substance is increased and the full extent of our reaction can be

observed.

 

Mental and emotional symptoms caused by allergenic foods can be experienced

immediately or they may be delayed (usually developing the following day).

These symptoms can last for up to four days after the food is eliminated from

the diet. Fatigue, intensified cravings, and an increase in other related

allergic symptoms may also be experienced during this time. Surprisingly, if

the

offending food is eaten again during this " clearing out " period, symptoms

will be abated and the craving-fulfillment-illness cycle may begin again. In

some instances, eating an allergen can trigger a binge -an uncontrollable urge

to overeat.

 

According to clinical ecologists, addictive allergies to wheat, milk,

chocolate, and other commonly eaten foods account for most brain allergies.

Interestingly, the proteins in some of these foods contain heroin-like peptides

which perhaps explain how they can create such severe cravings in susceptible

individuals.

 

FOOD ADDITIVES

 

In addition to food allergies, many patients suffering symptoms of mental

illness test positive for reactions to food additives and preservatives. Zane

R. Gard, M.D. discusses food additives in a 1987 issue of the Townsend Letter

for Doctors. He asserts that several thousand chemicals are routinely and

intentionally added to food supplies during food processing and storage.

Thousands more compounds can become a part of our foods.

 

Allergist, Benjamin Feingold, M.D., has demonstrated that we can experience

brain and nervous system reactions to food additives. He has had significant

success treating hyperactive children with an additive-free diet. Although

his findings were initially highly criticized, careful research has since

verified that some hyperactive children do react to food additives.

 

Doris Rapp M.D. also effectively demonstrates the relationship between

allergic reactions and food additives (as well as many common foods). Her

research

shows that dramatic and indisputable behavioural and emotional symptoms can

be provoked with a sublingual administration of additives, foods, or

environmental chemicals after several days of avoidance of the substance. Dr.

Rapp's

work provides powerful documentation of the existence of brain allergy and I

highly recommend her books and videos to anyone interested in this subject,

as it relates to children and adults.

 

EXPANDED ALLERGY TESTING

 

How can you tell if your mental and emotional symptoms are caused by

allergies?

 

Clinical ecologists and orthomolecular physicians use several types of

diagnostic methods for allergy detection including sublingual or intradermal

provocation, muscle testing, pulse testing, electro-dermal screening and lab

tests

(RAST, DIMSOFT, cytotoxic testing). As previously mentioned, traditional

skin-patch (scratch) testing is considered by these practitioners to provide a

high level of false negatives.

 

Furthermore, as discussed above, this method ignores allergies that don't

involve IgE.

Many of these methods are controversial and some are limited to the

diagnosis of other very specific immune reactions so it may be necessary to

incorporate more than one testing method in order to get a more complete

understanding

of a patient's particular allergies.

 

The most indisputable and highly esteemed testing method accepted by

conventional allergists and ecological/orthomolecular practitioners alike, is

the

use of a carefully managed elimination diet. The person following such a diet

avoids suspected allergens, and then makes carefully observed reintroductions

of each potentially problematic food. If you suspect that you may be

experiencing brain allergies, you can structure an elimination diet for

yourself at

home. Another useful method of observing your reactions to specific foods is

to keep a diet diary such as the Memory Minder at

_http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index5.html_

(http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index5.html) , recording

everything you eat and monitoring your feeling of well-being between mealtimes.

 

For more information on this strategy as well as allergy testing and the

elimination diet, please see the Whole Approach newsletter article

Candida-Related Complex and Food Allergies at

_http://wholeapproachforums.com/6/ubb.x?a=tpc & s=660609395 & f=5926041921 & m=1326030\

202_

(http://wholeapproachforums.com/6/ubb.x?a=tpc & s=660609395 & f=5926041921 & m=1326030\

202)

 

It is important to recognize that despite the increasing evidence to support

the contrary, some doctors still completely dismiss non-ordinary allergy

symptoms as being " all in the patient's head. " According to Claude A. Frazier,

M.D., a prominent Asheville, North Carolina allergist, " many people with

obscure and un-diagnosable complaints who are labeled hypochondriac are

actually

suffering from food allergy " .

 

Sadly, receiving the " hypochondriac " label often leads to an increase in the

negative psychological impact of the allergy, as patients suffering from a

real problem go home worrying about their sanity. If you receive this type of

dismissal from your doctor, you may wish to seek out a more informed health

care practitioner. To find practitioners familiar with the complex issues of

diagnosis and treatment of allergy, your best option is to look for an

Orthomolecular M.D., clinical ecologist or medical doctor/naturopathic

physician,

who has a special interest in environmental medicine and allergy related

illness.

 

ALLERGY TREATMENT

 

Many of the allergy treatments that have been developed still receive wide

criticism because of the difficulty in proving their effectiveness in

scientific studies. As more researchers and physicians join this important

field and

contribute to the growing pool of expertise, the accuracy and effectiveness

of treatments will grow. At this point in time, the following allergy

management and treatment methods are the most widely accepted:

 

* Neutralization Injections - Dilute extracts of the allergens or a mix of

diluted allergens and enzymes can increase the body's ability to cope with

allergens.

* NAET Therapy - This therapy tests for and eliminates allergies using

muscle response testing combined with acupuncture and chiropractic

adjustments.

* Enzyme Therapy - Supplemental digestive enzymes can reduce or eliminate

reactions to foods.

* Elimination/ Provocation - An elimination diet, or four-day-rotation diet

can be useful.

* Homeopathic Nosode Neutralization Therapy - The use of gradually

increasing potencies of homeopathic doses of allergens (nosodes) increases the

body's

ability to cope with allergens.

* Nutritional Supplementation and Immune Support - Bioflavonoids, Ester C

(e.g. Neutral C Plus _http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index2.html_

(http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index2.html) , SBX

_http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index.html_

(http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index.html) ), niacin, vitamin B6, B5,

methionine, grape seed extract (e.g. OtiZinc Plus

_http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index2.html_

(http://wholeapproach.com/shop/index2.html) ) and free form amino

acids fight allergies; other immune boosting supplements reduce allergic

reactions.

 

CREATING AN ALLERGY-FREE FUTURE

 

Thankfully, the developing body of knowledge about brain

allergies/ecological mental illness is opening up new horizons for many

patients and their

doctors. Even the old standby " chemical imbalance " explanation for psychiatric

disturbances is being re-examined as we discover that many so-called mentally

ill patients can eliminate their symptoms by avoiding specific causative

allergens. Finally, both physical and cerebral reactions are being recognized

as

two fundamentally different types of allergic reaction.

 

Reversing allergies, once they've been established, presents a serious

challenge. Increasing awareness of the severity of this challenge is leading to

an

appreciation that the best treatment for the problem is the preventative

approach. If we focus on creating healthy indoor and outdoor environments in

which to live and raise well-nourished, emotionally well-adjusted children, we

can prevent allergy-related health problems in many adults.

 

NOTE:

If you are struggling with Candida Related Complex, because of the close

relationship between allergies and candida, there is a very good chance that

you

may be susceptible to mental/emotional allergic reactions. You can read more

about allergies and candida in the Whole Approach article called " Candida

Related Complex and Allergies " (on our forum page at

_www.wholeapproachforums.com_ (http://www.wholeapproachforums.com) ). You can

read more about Candida

and Emotional Health in the Whole Approach article called " Recovery from

Candida Related Complex, an Opportunity for Mental, Emotional and Spiritual

Growth " _http://wholeapproach.com/newsletter/pop200212.html_

(http://wholeapproach.com/newsletter/pop200212.html) (also found on the forum

pages at

_www.wholeapproachforums.com_ (http://www.wholeapproachforums.com) ). To

receive a

list of resources on the above article, please email _info_

(info) And request a resource listing for the April

2003 article.

 

Tarilee Cornish of Nature's Paradigm is a moderator on the Whole Approach

forums at _http://www.wholeapproachforums.com_

(http://www.wholeapproachforums.com) .

Tarilee is a nutritional consultant providing telephone-based coaching

services out of Ontario, Canada. She has a specialty in allergy, candida and

immune management.

Her services include nutrition and lifestyle needs assessment, nutritional

counselling and/or the development of a customized diet plan. She can be

reached via email at TLC (_www.naturesparadigm.com_

(http://www.naturesparadigm.com) )

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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