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Histamine

Critterina

Senior Member
Messages
1,238
Location
Arizona, USA
BTW, I found that the low histamine chef recommendations were WAY too high in histamine for me. I would not be able to breathe if I used most of those recipes - but I didn't find out until buying the cookbook. The SIGHI food compatibility list is about 95% accurate for what I have had to avoid. The only way to really know what you react to, and what works for you in terms of supplements, is a several-month elimination diet.
 

Critterina

Senior Member
Messages
1,238
Location
Arizona, USA
Nope. I can take aspirin without issue. Are there other tests I should do?

Another thing, I seem to react only to the histamine-containing food, not histamine-releasing ones.
 

Sporty

Senior Member
Messages
161
Location
Essex, UK
@Sporty I've had excellent resultes w/, as mentioned by sregan, natural anti-histamines. Rutin works almost immediately for me. Also mangosteen. Royal jelly is more related to mast cell responses, it seems, than directly to histamines.

Folate can, indeed, increase histamine levels. but I successfully raised my folate to the levels I need, w/o histamine issues. Once in awhile as I increaed the dosage I'd get an immediate histamine response, and taking a MB12 sublingual would balance it out, eliminate the symptoms.

Before I understood that I have a predisposition to histamine intolerance, pharmaceuticals would inevitably lead to urticaria within a short time. I used to get acupuncture , clearing liver, at those times. Now I use coffee enemas to clear liver.


My favorite histamine resources:


The Many Faces of Histamine Intolerance http://healthypixels.com/?p=1044

http://thelowhistaminechef.com/wondering-why-you-react-to-everything-you-eat/

Histamine food list http://forums.phoenixrising.me/index.php?attachments/allowed-restricted-foods-pdf.6408/
http://www.histaminintoleranz.ch/download/SIGHI-FoodCompatibilityList_HIT(EN).pdf

http://thelowhistaminechef.com/these-probiotic-strains-lower-histamine-rather-than-raising-it/

http://peelingbacktheonionlayers.com/could-histamine-be-sabotaging-your-digestive-health/

Video talk, incl. supps for histamine http://thelowhistaminechef.com/dr-janice-joneja-histamine-intolerance-interview-pt2/

Hi,

Thanks for the reply!

Do we really definitely think it's histamine?

Simon
 

Sporty

Senior Member
Messages
161
Location
Essex, UK
In my limited understanding, if it itches, there's histamine involved. Worse in winter...is it dry skin? That could suggest a different direction.


Yeah I have to say it's worse in winter.....so I have to come to the conclusion it's temp related! If sauna helps it 90% of the time I have to think temp don't i? It's still there in the summer, but it's better. Cold sets it off......helped by sauna, exercise or warm bed. I can't work it out :0(

I don't think I have dry skin. Skin seems ok on sight. I'm going to try some Daosin.......so if it is histamine....
 

ahmo

Senior Member
Messages
4,805
Location
Northcoast NSW, Australia
I have urticaria and keep getting polyps

Simon, there is some good information on this forum about this. I started this thread with the same name a week or two ago.

Search for keywords like: DAO Enzyme, Luteolin, Rutin, Royal Jelly, Quercetin and Mangosteen. Those were a few things along with Vitamin C recommended to help someone with a Histamine problem.

Are these polyps in your nose? I've been calling my small lesions ulcer-like, in nose, ears, as well as extra waxy discharge from ears, wax 'sprayed' along my outer ear, crystal-like irritation in skin of eyelids: for me these are all mast cell symptoms. When my mast cells are activated, my adrenals are in stress. Mast cells release histamine, but not all histamine reactions involve mast cells.

Have you tried using any form of anti-histamine, either pharma (OTC) or natural? Dose it make any difference? This might be the easiest way to help you answer whether it's a histamine problem. If anti-hist relieves it, likely the problem is histamine. Then discovering the source of the problem becomes the next task.
 

Sporty

Senior Member
Messages
161
Location
Essex, UK
Are these polyps in your nose? I've been calling my small lesions ulcer-like, in nose, ears, as well as extra waxy discharge from ears, wax 'sprayed' along my outer ear, crystal-like irritation in skin of eyelids: for me these are all mast cell symptoms. When my mast cells are activated, my adrenals are in stress. Mast cells release histamine, but not all histamine reactions involve mast cells.

Have you tried using any form of anti-histamine, either pharma (OTC) or natural? Dose it make any difference? This might be the easiest way to help you answer whether it's a histamine problem. If anti-hist relieves it, likely the problem is histamine. Then discovering the source of the problem becomes the next task.

Hi

Yes my polyps are in my. Nose
I've had 3 operations for them now. I'm 3 months since my last op and my right nostril is closing up again, a lot of the time :0( some times. It's clear tho. Very odd!

You're right I do need to find out! I've tried antihistamines from my gp but I only ever take one or two then give up, as they never stop symptoms. I'm going to try these Daosin though, the whole pack of 30. I need to rule those in, or out. My nose and the itch are the big problems if it is allergy/histamine. You know in 15 years of having symptoms I've not worked out if it's allergy I have or what!
 

ahmo

Senior Member
Messages
4,805
Location
Northcoast NSW, Australia
I only ever take one or two then give up, as they never stop symptoms.
This suggests (suggests) that maybe there's something other than histamines at play.

My understanding about Daosin is that it works directly in conjunction with foods: take one before eating. So that's only going to work if food is the culprit.

A bit of mast cell info, hopefully not TMI! [Bold is my additions, from my notebook] Sorry about the long list in the symptoms quote, the formatting was originally in columns. This might help you to think beyond the itch, to see if mast cells might be involved.


Dr Janice Joneja Histamine Intolerance Interview Transcript http://lowhistaminechef.com/

Could you please give us an idea of how histamine intolerance, mast cell activation and mastocytosis are different; if in fact they are?

Well, actually, it’s all the same thing, because histamine is made, synthesized and stored within mast cells – so the mast cells are the focus of where the histamine comes from. So if, for example in a condition such as mastocytosis, we have an excess of mast cells, which, of course, means we have an excess of stored histamine. So anything that is going to trigger the release of that histamine, is going to lead to an excess of histamine; it’s not an allergic reaction – it is mast cells that are in excess, therefore histamine is going to be in excess, and anything that could reduce that histamine is going to be effective to a certain degree in reducing the symptoms that result from the release of histamine from the mast cells. So that’s the important factor in mastocytosis and similar conditions where there’s just too much histamine stored and then when it’s released, of course we have far too much of it so that is definitely a histamine associated condition which we could call histamine excess – not really histamine sensitivity in its sense of being due to an enzyme deficiency, but it’s definitely an excess of histamine.

....we do not have any definitive tests either for DAO function or histamine levels. What I mean here is that histamine fluctuates in the body constantly. We require histamine for brain function, it’s a neurotransmitter. We require histamine for digestion because it’s the trigger for the release of gastric acid, which is always released when we start to eat – it’s the first stage of breakdown of protein in the stomach, for example – and we require it constantly for protection because histamine is one of the ways the body fights infection or any adverse event in the body because these events will result in inflammation as the result of histamine release.....so a normal level would be different when, for example, a plasma sample is taken at different times during the day – different events during the day – and then in addition we might be able to measure DAO in blood, but it does not translate – never will translate – until we’ve got far better research into what is the importance of that level in clinical outcome....So, there we are in the beginning of this being recognised as a separate entity from allergy, but the research does not tell us exactly what this is going to translate to in a particular individual....we’re so used to medical tests – that’s our problem – so used to being told that we have to have a test for every condition that we see. The test results will then determine the diagnosis, the diagnosis determines therapy and so on and so forth.. That’s what we call the medical paradigm. And, unfortunately it can not be applied either to histamine sensitivity or to allergy....because these tests are often indicative of fluctuating histamine levels, which can be high in certain situations and so on, and maybe low Diamine Oxidase although we can not specify what low Diamine Oxidase is because we don’t have an normal level to compare it with...we can then perhaps introduce the idea of supplementing Diamine Oxidase as see if that will then help the problem. But in most cases if it is histamine sensitivity, we’ll reduce the external forces of histamine – and that’s all we can do. Then, in itself, it becomes both a diagnosis and a therapy.

Now, the most important thing about histamine intolerance is that – and this is the biggest difference between histamine intolerance and allergy – histamine intolerance is a dose related condition, which means that when you exceed your own limited tolerance, then you are going to show symptoms. So, to make this very simple, I give the analogy of filling up a bucket with water. We start at the bottom of the bucket with essential histamine – that will be histamine that our body makes for brain function, digestive function, protection – so we’ve always got a little bit of water in the bucket to begin with. Now if a person has an allergy, for example during the pollen season, so there are respiratory allergies, such as hay fever, they’re releasing more histamine, so that adds more water to the bucket. And then they may be consuming – well, they may even have an allergy to cats or dogs or something, so animal dander can add a bit more to the bucket. Then, they may be eating a high histamine diet: tomatoes -for example, cheese, a glass of wine, a pizza with pepperoni – each of these are adding on to the water that is already in the bucket. Some of these are already quite high and adding more and more and more – when that total level reaches the top of the bucket, it overflows – that’s when symptoms occur, because that’s exceeded the enzymes in the body’s ability to break down the excess and excrete it through the kidneys. So then we see the symptoms...

Multiple sources, but as long as we understand each of the sources, we can control it. What we’re doing is reducing that level that is above the level in the bucket that we require. So anything on top of that – especially in the diet – we’re going to bring down that level in the bucket. So, let’s look at where this histamine is coming from outside the body. This is what we call extrinsic histamine. So, as you said, we’ve got a variety of different foods – let’s look at the food themselves: where is the histamine coming from? Well, in fish, for example, you buy fresh fish, freshly caught and gutted, frozen fish: fish don’t have any histamine. But, if they are not processed adequately, if they are not frozen immediately after they are caught and gutted, then the bacteria in the gut of the fish start to break down protein. The protein of the flesh contains many amino acids, the most important of which (in our discussion) is histadine. Histadine is converted to histamine by histadine decarboxylase which is a specific enzyme which these bacteria make. This enzyme converts the histadine into histamine and the longer the fish is hanging around unprocessed and un-gutted – the level of the histamine rises and bacteria multiply every twenty minutes. So that histamine could rise pretty rapidly. So there’s the source from the fish. We can eat fish if we have an excess of histamine but it has to be freshly caught, gutted immediately or frozen immediately....The other caveat with canned fish – some of it is sulphited, as sulphites release histamine (by a different process) – anything sulphited must be avoided because that will release histamine. Shellfish, we don’t gut – so obviously, the shellfish are out because the bacteria in the gut of the shellfish do a similar thing – converting histadine to histamine and that’s always a potential source of histamine, so avoid shellfish – that’s the simplest thing....eggs – in themselves don’t contain histamine, but egg whites are known to be a histamine-releaser. So anything with excess egg whites – mouse, or merengue or baked alaska, for example, where the egg whites are predominant, are not a good food for histamine. A small amount of egg in a baked product doesn’t seem to be a problem at all.


some fruits (particularly) need histamine for ripening. Particularly the red ones. So things like tomatoes, cherries even red beans, for some obscure reason that I can’t find in the research literature, but I’m hoping someone will look at this more closely, they need histamine for the ripening process...Berries tend to be high in benzoates. Natural benzoates. Benzoates release histamine. And so certain berries are higher in benzoates and so release more histamine. And the berries that I see that are really problematic tend to be strawberries, raspberries, cranberries....cinnamon, it has a very high level of benzoates – so again we’ve got this factor where histamine is released as a result of the benzoates in the cinnamon. And cinnamon in any spice mixture such as curry spice mixture, chilli spice mixture – and then there are certain herbs which release histamine. Thyme, for example, releases histamine....Blueberries: these are berries, some of them will have benzoates, some of them don’t – it depends on the species, the ripeness and all sorts of things. Blueberries are low on the berries list, but all berries do have certain level of benzoate that we do have to be a little bit cautious about. So these are usually perfectly okay – the level, the association with histamine is not really significant. Of the list you gave me – cacao: that is a problem with histamine, that one I wouldn’t include. You see the problem is that it’s very difficult to associate a reaction with a specific food. You can do it with allergy, of course, because you eat the food – you have an allergy [reaction], there it is, clear and simple. But if you are on a low histamine diet already, the level of the water in your bucket is pretty low, it’s below your limit of tolerance. And so you can eat certain histamine related foods – particularly if they’re not very high in histamine or benzoate, you’re not filling up your bucket with water, so in this situation you can consume these more beneficial foods and still not fill up your bucket with water. As long as you are not consuming a lot of other high histamine foods. And that’s the beauty of histamine intolerance without allergy is that you do have this more liberal type of diet because until you reach and exceed your own limit of tolerance you are safe.[/QUOTE]

http://mastcelldisorders.wallack.us/yabb/YaBB.pl?num=1358063213 Mast Cell Disorder Forum


So, let´s sum this up so we can all get on the same page......

There are some people who have a histamine intolerance.

There are also others who have difficulty metabolizing histamine.

However, when we are dealing with a Mast Cell Disorder, this is a defect upon the mast cell itself which causes it to release TOO MUCH histamine amongst other mediators.

This is not that the body is over producing it, but that the body is releasing too much of it. This is a totally different mechanism from the other two above. An MCD patient tolerates their histamine and they also metabolize it properly. There is nothing wrong with those functions and mechanisms. Instead, their mast cells have a dysfunction and this dysfunction means that their mast cells are not working properly causing an irregular release of mediators which include histamine. Yet, it´s not only histamine which is the problem here for there are other mediators which cause some impressive reactions which the patient in their ignorance may blame totally on histamine release.

This is why a MC disorder is so very difficult to pin down for there are numerous symptoms being caused by numerous mediators and even though histamine is one of the mediators which is normally found in abundance it is not the only one!!! The symptoms which a patient and even doctor could wish to totally blame on histamine release in reality is an OVERLAPPING of symptoms. Histamine is a very strong neurotransmittor and the mast cell released a great many other neurotransmittors and if you were to research the other MC mediators you will find that they have overlapping jobs of vasodilation and vasoconstriction and broncodialation and many other properties and they all overlap. And if we consider the basophils they also are called into action by the MC mediators and they could be releasing their granules based upon the MCs activation. It´s a huge, complex, chemical chain reaction which malfunctioning MCs create which is a completely different mechanism than a simple histamine intolerance or a histamine metabolation defect infers.

Let us not get lost with the needle in the haystack for the issue here isn´t the needle, but the haystack itself! Lisa

Prior to the current mast cell movement, there were various theories and understanding of what happens biochemically in the body during anaphylaxis. Current understanding of IgE Food allergies, food intolerances, histamine intolerance, and others overlap with mast cell understanding to date.

I have been diagnosed with MCAS by a top mast cell specialist and do not question the existance of MCAS, but am trying to connect the dots by studying biochemistry to explain what is happening in my own body, and sort out my own triggers. I am looking to existing publications, powerpoints, articles, blogs, newsletters, etc to fill in the missing blanks.

No matter where the histamine comes from, it needs to be catabolized (broken down). Ineffective breakdown pathways are implicated in poor histamine metabolism, with DAO and HNMT as two necessary enzymes to break down histamine. DAO breaks down histamine in cells and HNMT within the cells. This is important to understand, since the HNMT pathway leads to N MethylHistamine, a key mediator often tested to confirm MCAS. Also some of us are more sensitive to exogenous histamine than others, and may play a part in why some of us do better on low histamine diets and others don’t. Considering some of us tolerate certain meds better than others, one reason could be that certain meds lower DAO production, raise histamine levels, or trigger the release of histamine.

I have food allergies, food intolerances, anaphylaxis and less severe mast cell reactions, which provoke different reactions in me. Sorting all these reactions out, I am better able to identify the actual triggers.

Dr Janice Vickerstaffr Joneja, is a researcher, educator, author, and clinical counsellor with thirty years of experience in the area of biochemical and immunological reactions involved in food allergy and intolerance. She holds a Ph.D. in medical microbiology and immunology, and has been a member of the academic faculty of the University of British Columbia and other universities. Currently, she is an adjunct professor in the Faculty of Agricultural Sciences at the University of British Columbia, and an Honorary Research Fellow in the School of Biosciences at the University of Birmingham in England. Dr. Joneja is also a dietitian (RD), registered in the College of Dietitians of British Columbia, a member of Dietitians of Canada, and the American Dietetic Association. For 12 years she was head of the Allergy Nutrition Program at the Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre. She is the author of five books and a dietetic practice manual on food allergy, and her work has been published in peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals, as well as in popular magazines. Dr. Joneja is a respected lecturer at universities, colleges and hospitals internationally, and regularly appears on television and radio call-in shows as an expert in her field.

found this on dr amy yasko’s site: ”Lack of BH4 may result in mast cell degranulation and lead to higher histamine levels, which can produce symptoms such as red ears and other hypersensitivity reactions. Serotonin synthesis as well as ammonia detoxification also require BH4. Elevated ammonia levels can cause flapping and other over-stimulatory behaviors.“

http://www.mastocytosis.ca/signs.htm

Signs and symptoms of Mastocytosis and Mast Cell Activation Syndrome are many and variable per patient. Idiopathic Anaphylaxis patients experience many of the same symptoms, have few if any signs or indicators to explain their illness, but their dominant symptom of anaphylaxis persists.

The signs (eg.skin spots, unusual lab test results, etc.) appear due to an over-abundance of mast cells either limited to the skin or internally, or both. The symptoms occur when mast cells are http://www.mastocytosis.ca/symptoms.htm to degranulate. Mast cell degranulation is a normal response of the immune system trying to protect the body. However, these disorders trigger mast cell activation (ie. degranulation) with or without apparent or valid trigger. Things such as foods and drinks, extreme temperatures in water or air, emotional and physical stress - these are only a few examples - can http://www.mastocytosis.ca/symptoms.htm mast cell degranulation for these patients. If the patient has both an over-abundance of mast cells, in addition to having excessively active mast cells (ie. degranulating when they should not), then the symptoms and illness become more severe, prolonged and life threatening.

Some patients experience only a few symptoms, some experience many, some have all of them at various times or persistently. There is no way to fully predict what each patient will experience.

Initially, only a few signs and symptoms may be present. Especially if diagnosis takes several years, the signs and symptoms escalate in type, severity, frequency and persistence, eventually leading to permanent disability or death. Listed below are 58 signs and symptoms reported to us by patients consistently over the past 10 years.

skin lesions or sores

skin rash, spots, redness

hives

persistent fatigue

itching

flushing & severe sweating

joint, bone pain

headaches

tachycardia (racing heartrate)

eyes tearing/dry, eye pain

persistent body/tissue pain

difficulty exercising

vertigo

episodes of low body temperature

unexplained Vitamin B12 deficiency

scents/odors/chemical reactions

difficult menses (females)

numbness & tingling
in face and extremities

skin feels on fire

unexplained anxiety

sudden drops in blood pressure

fainting

persistent diarrhea

vomiting

unexplained weight loss

cognitive impairment

sinus problems

chest pain

vision problems

hair loss

mouth sores

nausea

swelling & inflammation

odd reactions to insect stings

anesthesia difficulties

anemia

thyroid problems

decreased bone density

unexplained weakness

shortness of breath

sunlight sensitivity

temperature (hot/cold) sensitivity

difficulty with foods, drinks

anaphylactoid reactions

anaphylaxis

gastrointestinal pain, bloating

unexplained medication reactions

enlarged liver/spleen

liver/spleen/bladder/kidney pain

enlarged lymph nodes

frequent urination

recurring infections

neuropathic pain

constipation (MCAS)

iron deficiency

unexplained bruising, bleeding

malabsorption

intermittent tinnitus or hearing problems

Another long list follows this info, go to source for more.
http://www.mastocytosis.ca/signs.htm

Signs and symptoms of Mastocytosis and Mast Cell Activation Syndrome are many and variable per patient. Idiopathic Anaphylaxis patients experience many of the same symptoms, have few if any signs or indicators to explain their illness, but their dominant symptom of anaphylaxis persists.

The signs (eg.skin spots, unusual lab test results, etc.) appear due to an over-abundance of mast cells either limited to the skin or internally, or both. The symptoms occur when mast cells are http://www.mastocytosis.ca/symptoms.htm to degranulate. Mast cell degranulation is a normal response of the immune system trying to protect the body. However, these disorders trigger mast cell activation (ie. degranulation) with or without apparent or valid trigger. Things such as foods and drinks, extreme temperatures in water or air, emotional and physical stress - these are only a few examples - can http://www.mastocytosis.ca/symptoms.htm mast cell degranulation for these patients. If the patient has both an over-abundance of mast cells, in addition to having excessively active mast cells (ie. degranulating when they should not), then the symptoms and illness become more severe, prolonged and life threatening.

Some patients experience only a few symptoms, some experience many, some have all of them at various times or persistently. There is no way to fully predict what each patient will experience.
 

Sporty

Senior Member
Messages
161
Location
Essex, UK
This suggests (suggests) that maybe there's something other than histamines at play.

My understanding about Daosin is that it works directly in conjunction with foods: take one before eating. So that's only going to work if food is the culprit.

A bit of mast cell info, hopefully not TMI! [Bold is my additions, from my notebook] Sorry about the long list in the symptoms quote, the formatting was originally in columns. This might help you to think beyond the itch, to see if mast cells might be involved.


Dr Janice Joneja Histamine Intolerance Interview Transcript http://lowhistaminechef.com/

Could you please give us an idea of how histamine intolerance, mast cell activation and mastocytosis are different; if in fact they are?

Well, actually, it’s all the same thing, because histamine is made, synthesized and stored within mast cells – so the mast cells are the focus of where the histamine comes from. So if, for example in a condition such as mastocytosis, we have an excess of mast cells, which, of course, means we have an excess of stored histamine. So anything that is going to trigger the release of that histamine, is going to lead to an excess of histamine; it’s not an allergic reaction – it is mast cells that are in excess, therefore histamine is going to be in excess, and anything that could reduce that histamine is going to be effective to a certain degree in reducing the symptoms that result from the release of histamine from the mast cells. So that’s the important factor in mastocytosis and similar conditions where there’s just too much histamine stored and then when it’s released, of course we have far too much of it so that is definitely a histamine associated condition which we could call histamine excess – not really histamine sensitivity in its sense of being due to an enzyme deficiency, but it’s definitely an excess of histamine.

....we do not have any definitive tests either for DAO function or histamine levels. What I mean here is that histamine fluctuates in the body constantly. We require histamine for brain function, it’s a neurotransmitter. We require histamine for digestion because it’s the trigger for the release of gastric acid, which is always released when we start to eat – it’s the first stage of breakdown of protein in the stomach, for example – and we require it constantly for protection because histamine is one of the ways the body fights infection or any adverse event in the body because these events will result in inflammation as the result of histamine release.....so a normal level would be different when, for example, a plasma sample is taken at different times during the day – different events during the day – and then in addition we might be able to measure DAO in blood, but it does not translate – never will translate – until we’ve got far better research into what is the importance of that level in clinical outcome....So, there we are in the beginning of this being recognised as a separate entity from allergy, but the research does not tell us exactly what this is going to translate to in a particular individual....we’re so used to medical tests – that’s our problem – so used to being told that we have to have a test for every condition that we see. The test results will then determine the diagnosis, the diagnosis determines therapy and so on and so forth.. That’s what we call the medical paradigm. And, unfortunately it can not be applied either to histamine sensitivity or to allergy....because these tests are often indicative of fluctuating histamine levels, which can be high in certain situations and so on, and maybe low Diamine Oxidase although we can not specify what low Diamine Oxidase is because we don’t have an normal level to compare it with...we can then perhaps introduce the idea of supplementing Diamine Oxidase as see if that will then help the problem. But in most cases if it is histamine sensitivity, we’ll reduce the external forces of histamine – and that’s all we can do. Then, in itself, it becomes both a diagnosis and a therapy.

Now, the most important thing about histamine intolerance is that – and this is the biggest difference between histamine intolerance and allergy – histamine intolerance is a dose related condition, which means that when you exceed your own limited tolerance, then you are going to show symptoms. So, to make this very simple, I give the analogy of filling up a bucket with water. We start at the bottom of the bucket with essential histamine – that will be histamine that our body makes for brain function, digestive function, protection – so we’ve always got a little bit of water in the bucket to begin with. Now if a person has an allergy, for example during the pollen season, so there are respiratory allergies, such as hay fever, they’re releasing more histamine, so that adds more water to the bucket. And then they may be consuming – well, they may even have an allergy to cats or dogs or something, so animal dander can add a bit more to the bucket. Then, they may be eating a high histamine diet: tomatoes -for example, cheese, a glass of wine, a pizza with pepperoni – each of these are adding on to the water that is already in the bucket. Some of these are already quite high and adding more and more and more – when that total level reaches the top of the bucket, it overflows – that’s when symptoms occur, because that’s exceeded the enzymes in the body’s ability to break down the excess and excrete it through the kidneys. So then we see the symptoms...

Multiple sources, but as long as we understand each of the sources, we can control it. What we’re doing is reducing that level that is above the level in the bucket that we require. So anything on top of that – especially in the diet – we’re going to bring down that level in the bucket. So, let’s look at where this histamine is coming from outside the body. This is what we call extrinsic histamine. So, as you said, we’ve got a variety of different foods – let’s look at the food themselves: where is the histamine coming from? Well, in fish, for example, you buy fresh fish, freshly caught and gutted, frozen fish: fish don’t have any histamine. But, if they are not processed adequately, if they are not frozen immediately after they are caught and gutted, then the bacteria in the gut of the fish start to break down protein. The protein of the flesh contains many amino acids, the most important of which (in our discussion) is histadine. Histadine is converted to histamine by histadine decarboxylase which is a specific enzyme which these bacteria make. This enzyme converts the histadine into histamine and the longer the fish is hanging around unprocessed and un-gutted – the level of the histamine rises and bacteria multiply every twenty minutes. So that histamine could rise pretty rapidly. So there’s the source from the fish. We can eat fish if we have an excess of histamine but it has to be freshly caught, gutted immediately or frozen immediately....The other caveat with canned fish – some of it is sulphited, as sulphites release histamine (by a different process) – anything sulphited must be avoided because that will release histamine. Shellfish, we don’t gut – so obviously, the shellfish are out because the bacteria in the gut of the shellfish do a similar thing – converting histadine to histamine and that’s always a potential source of histamine, so avoid shellfish – that’s the simplest thing....eggs – in themselves don’t contain histamine, but egg whites are known to be a histamine-releaser. So anything with excess egg whites – mouse, or merengue or baked alaska, for example, where the egg whites are predominant, are not a good food for histamine. A small amount of egg in a baked product doesn’t seem to be a problem at all.


some fruits (particularly) need histamine for ripening. Particularly the red ones. So things like tomatoes, cherries even red beans, for some obscure reason that I can’t find in the research literature, but I’m hoping someone will look at this more closely, they need histamine for the ripening process...Berries tend to be high in benzoates. Natural benzoates. Benzoates release histamine. And so certain berries are higher in benzoates and so release more histamine. And the berries that I see that are really problematic tend to be strawberries, raspberries, cranberries....cinnamon, it has a very high level of benzoates – so again we’ve got this factor where histamine is released as a result of the benzoates in the cinnamon. And cinnamon in any spice mixture such as curry spice mixture, chilli spice mixture – and then there are certain herbs which release histamine. Thyme, for example, releases histamine....Blueberries: these are berries, some of them will have benzoates, some of them don’t – it depends on the species, the ripeness and all sorts of things. Blueberries are low on the berries list, but all berries do have certain level of benzoate that we do have to be a little bit cautious about. So these are usually perfectly okay – the level, the association with histamine is not really significant. Of the list you gave me – cacao: that is a problem with histamine, that one I wouldn’t include. You see the problem is that it’s very difficult to associate a reaction with a specific food. You can do it with allergy, of course, because you eat the food – you have an allergy [reaction], there it is, clear and simple. But if you are on a low histamine diet already, the level of the water in your bucket is pretty low, it’s below your limit of tolerance. And so you can eat certain histamine related foods – particularly if they’re not very high in histamine or benzoate, you’re not filling up your bucket with water, so in this situation you can consume these more beneficial foods and still not fill up your bucket with water. As long as you are not consuming a lot of other high histamine foods. And that’s the beauty of histamine intolerance without allergy is that you do have this more liberal type of diet because until you reach and exceed your own limit of tolerance you are safe.





Another long list follows this info, go to source for more.[/QUOTE]
Great




Great, thanks for the article! Something else to consider! Lol what is this mast cell thing then, in a nut shell? Is there a treatment for it?


I am going to start with the Daosin. See if there's any help there. After that I will try an antihistamine for at least a week. I need to try these options before I see my gp again hey? I need to get a handle on this.....
 

ahmo

Senior Member
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Northcoast NSW, Australia
What I've posted is the closest to a nutshell I can offer. It's diverse. I have a small collection of relatively insignificant symptoms. Others have more systemic issues. Treatments have to do with anti-histaminic substances, largely. mastcellmaster.com is the place for more scientific info. The other links in my thread will give you further info, including mast cell forums.

Definitive testing means a bone marrow biopsy. Other sorts of testing can be unreliable. Good luck w/ DAOsin.:thumbsup:
 

Sporty

Senior Member
Messages
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Location
Essex, UK
What I've posted is the closest to a nutshell I can offer. It's diverse. I have a small collection of relatively insignificant symptoms. Others have more systemic issues. Treatments have to do with anti-histaminic substances, largely. mastcellmaster.com is the place for more scientific info. The other links in my thread will give you further info, including mast cell forums.

Definitive testing means a bone marrow biopsy. Other sorts of testing can be unreliable. Good luck w/ DAOsin.:thumbsup:

Well I can only thank you whole heartedly for the information. It's much appreciated! I need to get a handle on this. I looked into HI a few months ago but kinda gave up on it after I changed my diet but never noticed much change. I'll defo try the Daosin and antihistamines.....
 
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32
Hi. I'm in the middle of a 3-day fast to try to reset my immune system from my histamine intolerances. My pulmonologist said fasting is the only thing that resets the immune system in terms of allergies and sensitivities. Has anyone tried it? He said it has to be water only. Although I am taking my prescriptions and vitamins; I hope that will be OK.

I've tried DAOsin, and didn't get as bad a reaction from the foods I ate, but still it was no cure-all. I found that digestive enzymes helped, too. So, for Christmas when I thought that there was probably some ingredient that someone forgot to tell me about, I used both and did fine.

Histame is the same as DAOsin; I don't know about the other one. I would avoid D-Hist because it has NAC in it, something that you need to avoid if you are HI.

I don't know if you already know this or not but Amylase in Digestive enzymes in said to reduce histamine. I'm actually looking into reducing histamine myself. Too bad I can't use quercetin since I don't do well with methyl donors and Comt Inhibitors.
 
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Hi, so much has been said in this thread, that I don't need to add much, just something about my personal experiences.

I was diagnosed with Histamine Intolerance with DAO deficiency about 8 years ago. Eliminating Histamine from my diet has certainly made a huge difference. I try to eat as little Histamine food as possible, which is easier at home. I experienced so many bad reactions when I was eating out that now I usually take an antihistamine pill before, just in case. It took a while to figure out how I was reacting to different foods and what to avoid alltogether and what I could tolerate in small amounts. After eliminating Histamine for a while I became better at identifying a reaction, if I had something accidentally. I used to get a headache/migraine, as quite an immediate reaction. Sometimes I also got incredibly tired, I had to lie down and sleep for a few hours. So I avoided it at all cost.

It took some time to figure out which products I could tolerate, like a certain sheep cheese is ok with me now. Also you have to be aware of the fact that Histamine can develop in home cooked food. For example I realized that I had a bad reaction to some veg or chicken meals in sauces, if I reheated them later or on the next day. So I have to eat freshly cooked meals, I do not cook big batches in advance.

Now I seem to be able to tolerate some Histamine. For example I notice no problem with tomatoes or other fruit and veg. I can get away even with a bit of chocolate (in moderation :)). I still react badly on vinegar and other fermented products like soy sauce and yeast. If I get a reaction it is mainly a reaction on my skin, i.e. red spots/blotches on my face. They usually show up on the next day and sometimes take a few days to disappear. So the skin reaction shows me that I have eaten something wrong, but it is not as bad as the horrible headaches I used to get some years ago.

It is definitely work looking into. At the time I was also diagnosed fructose and lactose intolerant, but avoiding Histamine made the biggest difference.
 

Critterina

Senior Member
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Location
Arizona, USA
I don't know if you already know this or not but Amylase in Digestive enzymes in said to reduce histamine. I'm actually looking into reducing histamine myself. Too bad I can't use quercetin since I don't do well with methyl donors.
Darrin,
Thanks for the tip! The 3-day fast worked wonders for me. It reduced my histamine intolerance so that I can eat anything now, and sometimes I get a little stuffy in the nose, but nothing that lasts more than a half hour and I can't be sure it's not due to the restaurant (candles, perfumes, etc.) (But my doctor was alarmed that I told people and that another person tried the fast without their doctor's recommendation, so I'm just adding that info, so people don't just go off and do it. Apparently some people shouldn't fast.)