Food intolerance

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Classification according to ICD-10
A05 Other bacterial food poisoning
L27.2 Dermatitis from ingested foods
T78.0 Anaphylactic shock from food intolerance
T78.1 Other food intolerance, not elsewhere classified
E70-E90 Metabolic disorders
K90.0 Celiac disease
ICD-10 online (WHO version 2019)

As a food intolerance or food intolerance reaction ( Engl. : Adverse food reaction ) are as defined by the European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI) designated in 1994 following reactions after ingestion:

  • toxic reactions: food poisoning
  • non-toxic reactions
    • non-immunological reactions
      • enzymatic intolerances
      • pharmacological intolerances
      • Food additive intolerance
    • immunological reactions

In the narrower sense, the term, and especially the synonymously used term food intolerance, only covers intolerance reactions without a toxic and / or allergic background.

Epidemiology

It is estimated that around one to two percent of all people are food intolerant. Deviating from this number, 10–20% of people in surveys state that they themselves think they suffer from food intolerance.

Pathophysiology

Toxic reactions

Toxic reactions after ingestion of food are based on the general toxicity of individual food components for the body .

Non-toxic reactions

Non-toxic reactions are based on an individual's sensitivity to food components. A distinction is made between immunological and non-immunological reactions.

Immunological reactions

Immunological reactions, usually referred to as food allergies , are individually occurring intolerance reactions, the symptoms of which occur after repeated allergen contact ( sensitization ). According to the underlying pathomechanisms, a distinction is made between two forms:

  • IgE-mediated reactions
  • Non-IgE-mediated reactions
    , the gluten intolerance ( celiac disease , in adulthood as celiac sprue called) is one of the immunologically -related, non-IgE-mediated food intolerances.

Non-immunological reactions

According to the underlying pathomechanisms, a distinction is made between three types of intolerance reactions that have neither a toxic nor an allergic background.

Symptoms

Mostly, food intolerances show up on the skin and mucous membranes . But the lungs , gastrointestinal system (20%) and cardiovascular system (10%) can also be affected.

The main symptoms are:

Therapy, prevention

The therapy of choice is avoiding the blamed foods . In the case of high-risk infants who, for various reasons, cannot be breast-fed exclusively, there are limited indications that prolonged administration of infant formula made from hydrolyzed proteins can cause food intolerance (allergies in infancy and childhood in general and the occurrence of cow's milk allergy in particular). can reduce. However, more well-planned studies are needed for final clarification.

In the hospital sector, the organ-related light diets (intestinal, bile, liver, stomach and pancreas diets ) have been abandoned in favor of the light whole food (or basic gastroenterological diet ) that is customary today . According to a survey carried out in 1978 by the German Working Group for Clinical Nutrition and Dietetics on over 2000 non-selected clinical patients, those foods that caused symptoms in over 10% of those surveyed are avoided.

These are (in brackets the frequency of the information):

literature

  • P. Fritsch: Pathogenesis and systematics of food intolerance. In: Dermatology, Venereology: Basics, Clinic, Atlas. 2nd Edition. Springer, 2004, ISBN 3-540-00332-0 , pp. 227ff.

swell

  1. C. Bruijnzeel-Koomen, C. Ortolani, K. Aas, C. Bindslev-Jensen, B. Björkstén, D. Moneret-Vautrin, B. Wüthrich: Adverse reactions to food. European Academy of Allergology and Clinical Immunology Subcommittee. In: Allergy. 1995 Aug; 50 (8), pp. 623-635, PMID 7503398 .
  2. ^ Pschyrembel clinical dictionary. 261. rework. Edition. 2007, ISBN 978-3-11-018534-8 .
  3. M. Classen, V. Diehl, K. Kochsiek: 14.4.3 Food intolerance In: Internal medicine. 5th edition. Urban & Fischer-Verlag, Munich 2006, ISBN 3-437-44405-0 , p. 1198.
  4. ^ I. Koop, K. Beckh: 4.21 Food intolerance, food allergy. In: Gastroenterology Compact. Georg Thieme Verlag, 2002, ISBN 3-13-126311-3 , p. 146.
  5. ^ P. Fritsch: Dermatology & Venereology for Studies. Springer, Heidelberg 2009, ISBN 978-3-540-79302-1 , pp. 124ff.
  6. ^ P. Fritsch: Dermatology & Venereology for Studies. 2009, p. 124ff.
  7. DA Osborn, J. Sinn: Formulas containing hydrolysed protein for prevention of allergy and food intolerance in infants. In: Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006 Oct 18; (4), S. CD003664. PMID 17054180
  8. German Federal Pension Insurance: Nutritional medicine and dietetics in rehabilitation facilities, 2005 (PDF; 2.0 MB).