Food Allergy Quiz
Do you or anyone else in your family have a food allergy? Take this quiz and
learn how to better cope with this condition.
1. Many people think they or someone in their family has a food
allergy, but they likely don't.
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Fewer than 1 in 13
children and 1 in 10 adults have proven food allergies. But many people think they
have
food allergies.
2. Food intolerance can be more serious than a food
allergy.
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Food intolerance means you may have digestive tract symptoms after
eating a certain type of food. For instance, lactose intolerance can cause gas,
bloating, and belly pain after drinking milk. A food allergy (hypersensitivity)
causes your immune system to react strongly to a food. For instance, a peanut allergy
can cause life-threatening symptoms. Food intolerances can be very uncomfortable.
But
they are not life threatening.
3. True food allergies tend to run in families with food
allergies. Or they run in families with other kinds of allergies, such as hay fever
or
asthma.
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Also, someone with 2
allergic parents is more likely to have food allergies than someone with one allergic
parent.
4. Thoroughly cooking a problem food will prevent it from causing an allergic reaction.
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Food allergens are
parts of the food that cause an allergic reaction. They are proteins within the food.
These proteins aren't usually broken down by the heat of cooking. In some cases, a
person with a food allergy may be able to eat cooked foods but not the raw foods.
Talk
with an allergist before eating any food that you have been allergic to in the past.
5. An allergic reaction to food usually starts hours after eating.
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An allergic reaction
usually starts within a few minutes. But symptoms can begin up to 2 hours after eating
the food. You may first have itching in the mouth as you start to eat the food. If
you
have severe food allergy symptoms, the mouth itching can quickly lead to more serious
symptoms. These include hives, coughing, shortness of breath, swelling, vomiting,
diarrhea, and drop in blood pressure. In some people this happens within minutes of
eating a food. For other people, the symptoms take longer to develop. The amount of
food
eaten can affect how fast symptoms appear and get worse. Exercise, illness, or asthma
also can affect this.
6. An allergic reaction to peanuts can be serious or even fatal,
but children often outgrow this allergy.
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Peanut allergies are
serious and can be fatal, However, children are more likely to outgrow allergies to
milk, eggs, or soy than allergies to peanuts, fish, or shrimp.
7. People who are allergic to ragweed might get an itchy mouth
when eating cantaloupe, particularly during ragweed season.
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This is called
cross-reactivity. Proteins in melons are similar to proteins in ragweed. People with
ragweed allergies might find that eating cantaloupe will cause itching in the mouth.
An
itchy mouth alone is not often a symptom of a severe allergy. But if a food causes
your
mouth to itch, don't eat it again until you talk with your allergist.
8. Sometimes a case of food poisoning can be confused with a food
allergy.
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Meat contaminated
with bacteria can cause what seems to be an allergic reaction. But it's really a form
of
food poisoning. Some fish that are spoiled or kept at too warm a temperature have
high
levels of a chemical called histamine. This may cause what appears to be an allergic
reaction in some people. This reaction is called scombroid (histamine) poisoning .
9. The only way to treat a food allergy is by not eating the
food.
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Once you and your
healthcare provider have identified the food that you are sensitive to, you'll need
to
remove the food from your diet. To remove the food, read the ingredient list for each
food before you eat it. Many allergy-causing foods such as peanuts, eggs, and milk
appear in foods that you may not think they would be in. For instance, peanuts are
often
used as a protein source. Eggs are used in some salad dressings. Removing the food
is
the first step in treating a food allergy. For some foods, there are medicines that
can
help reduce the risk of an allergic reaction if you are exposed to the food. There
is a
monoclonal antibody medicine that can be effective for several types of food allergies
in adults and children 1 year or older. There is also an oral immunotherapy medicine
approved for children ages
1
to 17 with a peanut allergy. These are treatments. But they're not a cure for food
allergy. Talk with your healthcare provider about treatments available for food
allergies.
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