Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome is a Hypersensitivity Disease
This article,
written by Dr. Stephen J. Gisason has been abstracted and adapted from
material going into a revision of his book "Nutritional Therapy".
Please read my
notes and my disclaimer at the end of the article.I've also placed a link
called IMPORTANT - PLEASE READ.
Index
Hypersensitivity diseases and
CFS
Hypersensitivity and it's meaning
Allergy (external)
Autoimmune diseases (internal)
Food Allergy and increased immune dysfunction
Cytokines and immune activity
I
and my clincial and research associates have worked for several years on
an effective management program for food allergic diseases. We believe
that food-triggered hypersensitivity diseases are common health problems
in our society. Our program features an elmental nutrient formula and complete
diet revision. Each patient is taught new skills in self-diagnosis and
self-regulation. We have successfully treated over 5,000 patients with
symptoms complexes which match or overlap the pattern of illness you are
calling ME and/or CFIDS. We will advocate diet revision as a primary strategy
of solving this health problem.
We live in sensitive bodies which interact with the environment. Immune
defenses are active every day, often responding to substances entering
our bodies through air, water, and the food supply. Increased immune activity
leads to hypersensitivity diseases. A general state of hypersensitivity
exists in many patients we see with chronic fatigue symptoms. Careful studies
have revealed that no single pattern of immunological abnormaility exists
in groups of patients with CFIDS. Nor is there any consistent pattern of
viral antibody production. Instead, various indices of immune activation
point to hypersensitivity state.
The term, "hypersensitivity", refers
to immunie-mediated diseases. Increased immune activity leads to hypersensitivity
diseases.
Allergy can be thought of as hypersensitity disorders
with external causes.
Internal hypersensitivity disorders are thought of as
autoimmune diseases. Although medical descriptions pretend there are distinct
boundaries it is unlikely that distinct inside or outside diseases exist.
The human body is in continuous relationship with the environment and a
constant molecular stream connects inside and outside. Autoimmune disorders
have inside, self-perpetuating causes as well as outside factors such as
ingested drugs and food materials. Non-specific hypersensitivity is often
expressed as food allergy and chemcial hypersensitivity with limited food
tolerance and even complete loss of tolerance to foods. Patients in this
predicament may notice reactions to numerous foods and airborne chemicals
and often need radical changes in their diet, and their environoment to
get better.
Food allergy is a hypersensitivity disorder with increased
immune responses to ingested materials. Food allergy involves the broadest
set of immune reactions to food materials. Since food-body interactions
are usually occurring every moment we live, immune responses to food are
diverse and capable of producing many symptoms and many diseases. The idea
of food allergy has been missing from the medical model, leaving a great
gap in our understanding of modern disease. For example, individual studies
have shown that milk and wheat ingestion can cause many disease states
- eczema, asthama, migraine headaches, celiac disease, arthritis - but
little is ever said about these problems in general medicine and no major
public investigation has ever been undertaken. If we were really interested
in the truth of disease, mil, wheat, and other foods should be under investigation
as causes of common diseases. There is, however, no agreement about the
prevalence and importance of food allergy as a set of disease mechanisms.
Specialists, including allergists with narrow viewpoints, often deny that
food allergy is a common problem. Outside the community of allergists there
is general ignorance and neglect of these disease possiblities. and it
is impossible to estimate the prevalence of food allergy by using medical
diagnoses. The presence of food allergy is concealed in a variety of other
diagnoses. Most allergists with an interest in the problems of food allergy
would agree that the expressions of food alllergic disease are diverse,
profound and not completely discovered or described. We suggest that the
concept of food allergy is to modern disease concepts as the idea of infection
was to disease concepts in the 19th century.
When you do not know about food allergy you are surrounded by mysterious
diseases. When you know about food allergy, a lot of common illness patterns
begin to make sense. Linda Gamlin who reviewed the concepts of food allergy
writes"The medical establishment finds many aspects of food intolerance
difficult to swallow, but the main problem is the plethora of symptoms
and the variations from one patient to another. Doctors working
with food intolerance report more than 40 possible symtoms and conditions....the
severity also varies. Some patients are said to have nothing more
than the occassional migraine or bout of fatigue, while at the other end
of the scale the sufferer is unable to work or lead any sort of normal
life" (3,4).
Immune responses to food antigens create many symptoms in complex patterns.
Four mechanisms of immune injury, described in immunology literature
as Types 1, 2, 3 and 4 hypersensitivity are responsible for the different
forms of food allergy. We are immunized to food molecules by GIT and then
develop immune-mediated or allergic disease after entry of food antigens
into the body by GIT error and/or inappropriate selection of food. Combinations
of the four hypersensitivity mechanisms are likely to occur in response
to food materials. Immune mediators produce symptoms such as flushing,
fever, anger, fear, itching, swelling, pain, coughing, wheezing, vomitting
and diarrhea. The effect of mediators released in the blood circulates
throughout the body in a matter of seconds. Mediators released in
tissues may remain localized. The local effect depends on how important
that tissue is and how disruptive the imune event is. A hive appearing
in the skin is a minor annoyance; a similar event in the retina of the
eye may result in the loss of vision.
Cytokines are potent mediators of immune activity.
These chemicals carry messages from one cell group to another and invoke
the most powerful of whole-body defense responses. The cytokines include
the inerferons and interleukins which cause many of the symptoms of bacterial
and viral infections - fever, headache, generalized aching, fatigue, weakness,
and clouded consciousness. The same symptoms are produced by cytokines
during food allergic reactions. Overproduction of one or more cytokines
may be responsible for non-specific hypersensititivty. patients presenting
with chronic fatigue, muscle aching, and brain dysfunctions often have
increased blood cytokine activity. If they are reacting to food (and most
are) the elevations of cytokines would be variable and inconsistent and
are therefore are not likely to be reliable tests of food allergy.
Symtpoms may be limited to the digestive tract - pain and diarrhea, triggered
by eating certain foods, for example. The lungs are the major target organ
in food-induces asthma, the skin in atopic dermatitis and the joints are
target organs in food allergic arthritis. Muscles and connective tissue
react with pain, stiffness, and swelling which, along with fatigue, are
among the most common food allergy symptoms. The brain is the target organ
when disorganized, disturbed thinking, feeling, remembering, and behaving
occur. Our psyche is completely vulnerable to the biological mechanisms
involved in food allergy. Mental-emotioanl disturbances are a consequence
of food allergy, not a cause of it.
The idea of "boosting your immune system" has become popular.
Odd diets, herbs, gland extracts and vitamin-mineral products are promoted
to enhance the immune system. From the hypersensitivity point-of-view,
we want less, immune response, not more. Allergic reactions involve increased,
damaging immune responses or hypersensitivity. If the immune system is
working overtime to defend against materials arriving in the body in air,
water and food, there is a penalty to pay.
When patients report recurrent colds, flus, or chronic fatigue, they often
refer to their "depressed immunity". Actually, they are experiencing
hypersensitivity symptoms. The solution is stop the intake of allergenic
foods and wait for the immune activity to subside. If the allergic disease
is severe we use immune-suppressant drugs to save patients from immune
injury.
An oversimplified, but convenient description of allergic patterns separates
immediate hypersensitivity patterns of illness. We often refer to the other,
more complicated problems as "Delayed Patterns of Food Allergy",
following the lead of Dr.William Knicker(5), Dr. J. Brostoff(6), and others.
Our focus is on the interface between things ingested and the inner body
space.
The boundary is the wall of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT). Understanding
what crosses this boundary is critical to the new understanding of food-related
dysfunction and disease. Now we realize that GIT errors mingle with all
body responses to food ingestion everyday. Drs.Coombs and McLaughlin summarized
the problem :"Food proteins in the gastrointestinal tract and their
absorption into the body as antigenci molecules have immunoligic significance
both in (i) initiating an allergic state and (ii) in the subsequent challenge(s)
where, by a variety of mechanisms, they may cause some form of food-allergic
disease".
Immediate food reactions such as lip and mouth swelling are more obviously
connected to food intake. The connection between food ingestion and delayed
symptoms is less obvious. Most people do not notice the connection between
food eaten and their body pains, fatigue or mood disturbances. A
variety of other terms are used by other authors to refer to distinctions
that are either obscure or misleading. We do not use terms such as "food
sensitivity" or "food intolerance" when the term "food
allergy" would do. Some physicians insist on limiting the use of the
word allergy; others use the term in its orginial snese of immune mediated
disease. We use the diagnostic term "delayed pattern food allergy"
to refer to a collection of nonspecific illness patters caused by the ingestion
of certain foods.
The chronic fatigue syndrome has been described in the medical literature
over many years. Indeed, the onset of many well-known diseases begins with
aching, fatigue and cognitive dysfunctions. Viral hepatitis, for example,
may simmer for many years and presents with these symptoms. Similar symptom
complexes occur in the early stages of autoimmune diseases such as lupus
erythematosis and multiiple sclerosis. These hypersensitivity diseases,
driven by immune activity. A.J. Rowe, T.G.Randolph , and Fredrick Speer
were among the first American allergists to associate CFS with food and
inhalant allergies. Rowe described "allergic toxemia" in 1930
with the symptoms - drowsiness, mental confusion, lack of initiative and
ambition, irritability, fatigue, aching and a feeling of being poisoned.
Mental and emotional symptoms arise from the same biological mechanisms
that produce physical symptoms. Rowe developed a number of elimination
diets to treat allergic toxemia and reproted that a wide spectrum of mental-emotional
and physical symptoms could be relieved by elimination diets. Dr. Theron
Randolph and Dr. Fredrick Speer also associated the symptom complex
of CFIDS with food and inhalant allergies. Dr.Speer referred to the "allergic-tension-fatigue
syndrome and described "motor fatigue". Stephen Strauss and associates
at the National Institute of Health noted a high prevalence of allergy
(of mediate hypersensitivity variety) in patients with CFS. The authors
of this paper failed to differentiate food from airborne allergy and ignored
the delayed patterns of food allergy which are well-described in the medical
literature. Strauss, in another paper on the history of the chronic fatigue
syndrome, studiously ignores all the work done on food allergy. These
references to a limited definition of allergy need to be clarified by a
better-informed, more sophisticated model of hypersensitivity disease.
The majority of patients we see with CFS do not have skin-test-positive
food allergy and they do get better with diet revision.
We are convinced that muscle testing, vega meters and may blood test for
food allergy or "sensitivity" have no validity. Often,
patients spend a lot of money on tests and treatments which have no value,
but benefit from diet revision. The only proper test and proper treatment
for chronic fatigue is complete diet revision.
The most common presentation of food allergy is as a nonspecific illness
with many symptoms in many parts of the body. The illness may be mild and
include nose congestion, headache, indigestion, flatulence, aching, stiffness
and fatigue. Flushing of face, ears, and neck is a common symptom, often
occurring during or shortly after eating. Dark circles around the eyes
are known as allergic shiners and are associated with edema or "bags"
under the eyes, which conspicuously mark people with chronic food allergy.
An astute observer can make the diagnosis of food allergy from across the
room (congestion, flushing, shiners). often tonsils, adenoids and
neck lymph nodes are enlarged. These immune system organs cotain the sensing,
reacting cells, which are stimulated by food allergens ingested every day,
and enlarge to defend the body against the perceived "enemies"
in food. Respiratory symptoms are often associated with headaches, digestive
symptoms, abdominal pain, muscle and joint pains, itches, rashes, hives,
eczema, irritability, sleep disturbances and nightmares. Resless or irritable
behavior may be linked to difficulty concentrating, mental fogginess, memory
loss, angry outbursts, moodiness, crying and low self-esteem.
Since food allergy is a whole-body disease, a lottery selection of disturbances
may evolve over many years. In many patients, we can trace the illness
pattern back to infancy with slow, intermittent emergence of symptoms over
many years. In other patients the illness begins abruptly with few
prior symptoms and progresses rapidly.
The illness may become severe and progress towards a disabling symptom
complex such as chronic fatigue syndrome. Food allergy also presents as
specific disorders such as migraines, asthama, chronic diarrhea, depression,
exzema, inflmmatory bowel disease or arthritis. Food allergy is often confused
with infections, bacterial and viral. The diagnosis may be "colds",
"flue", Epstein Barr virus, candida yeast infection, chronic
fatigue, fibromyalgia, myalgic encephalomyelitis, or just "a virus".
Food allergy is best diagnosed from the characteristic history of illness.
The best clue is the presence of many symptoms, in many different parts
of the body, over months to years. Skin tests do not reveal food allergy.
Even if some skin tests are positive, these tests do not accurately predict
the responses to foods eaten. Allergy expresses itself as inflammation:
redness, swelling, heat, and pain. In medical diagnosis the suffix "itis"
means inflammation. Thus, "rhinitis" means nose inflammation
and "arthritis" means joint inflammation. A simple rule of thumb
is that any disease whose description ends in "itis" could be
caused by food allergy.
Most of the patients we see with CFS do not acurately identify food allergy
as a cause of their illness. Many have disorganized eating habits;
some with compulsive eating and drinking habits. Toxicity from air pollution,
including tobacco smoke, industrial and domestic sources is also seldom
considered. A surprising number of sick people continue to smoke cigaretts,
drink coffee and eat junk foods. These people believe that they are helpless
victims of a virus or environmental pollution. They fail to
recognize that their illness begins at home with their eating habits and
their local environment. Cigarette smoking is so toxic that any other source
of pollution is insignificant until all smoking has stopped and the home
environment has been completely cleaned of hydrocarbon residues. We have
discovered that after you remove obvious problems such as cigarettes, coffee,
tea, alocholic beverages, chocolate and junk foods, the majority of patients
have symptoms from dairy, eggs, meat, and wheat (rye, oats, barley) ingestion.
Other foods are also involved in more individual, idosyncratic reaction
patterns.
Complete diet revision is necessary to restore health. We begin our therapy
by removing all food and beverage intake, supplying complete nutrition
with an elemental nurtrient formual, ENFood. This is a highly specialized
formula that safely boosts nutrient intake while all the problems related
to the food supply are eliminated. Some patients discover that fasting
alleviates their symptoms, although it still takes up to two weeks to clear
completely - too long for a healthy fast. Symptoms worsen during the first
few day of elimination, and then begin to clear. Following
a clearing period of seven to fourteen days, food is carefuly reintroduced
following a well tested plan, the "Core Program". Nutritional
supplements are always helpful, but without complete diet revision few
recover from their illness. Recovering patients report increased awareness
of food and environmental hypersensitivity.
This hypersensitivity might last a few month to several years. Our
impression is that this extreme form of hypersensitivity is on the increase
and manifests increased toxicity of the environment. A number of airborne
chemicals, native food chemcials, food additives and contaminants are suspects
in the health crime of hypersensitivity. Even detergents and emulsifying
agents in food are suspects(19). Some patients we have treated with CFIDS
have a complex illness which takes months or years to resolve. They seem
to have lost all tolerance to foods and only feel well if they live on
a minimal diet supplemented with ENFood for several months. They are hypersensitivity
to chemicals in their environment, and often need special protection. They
often need medication to modify or suppress their immune response. Some
are threatened by tissue damage from allergic reations to food antigens
and need protection with medications, including antihistamines, prednisone,
ketotifen and/or sodium cromoglycate.
Landay A.L.,
Jessop C., Lennette E.T., and Levy J.A.Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Clincial
Condition Associated with Immune Activation. Lancet 1991; 21 September:
707-711.
Knicker, W. Immunologically Medicated Reactions to Food: State of the Art.Annals
of Allergy 1987: 59 (II): 60-70.
Gamlin L. Cooking Up a Storm. New Scientist 1989; 8 July: 45-9.
Gamlin L. Another Man's Poison. New Scientist 1990: 15 July: 48-53
Knicker W.
Non-IgE Mediated and Delayed Adverse Reactions to Food Additives. Handbook
on Food Allergies, Ed.
Breneman J.C.; Marcel Kekker Inc. N.Y 1985.
Brostoff J. Mechanisms: Food Allergy and Intolerance: Balliere Tinbdal.
l987 and Implications Of, Passage of Intact Peptides Across the Intestinal
Mucosa. Bioche. Soc Trans 1983; 11:813.
Reinhardt
M.C. Macromolecular Abosrption of Food Antigens in Health and Disease.
Ann Allergy 1984: 53: 597-601
NcNeish A.S. Enzymatic Maturation of the Gastrointestinal Tract and its
Relevance to Food Allergy and Intolerance in Infancy. Ann Allergy 1985:
53: 643
Coombs, R.R.A., McLaughlan P. Ann Allergy 1984: 53: 592
Rowe, A. J. Allergic Toxemia and Migraine Due to Food Allergy. Calif West
Med 1930; 33: 785
Randolph T.G. Allergy As a Causative Factor in Fatiuge, Irritability, and
Behavior Problems in Children J. Pediat 1947:: 31: 560.
Speer, F. THe Allergic-Tension-Fatigue Syndrome. Pediat Clin N. Amer 1954;
1: 1019
The Allergic-Tension-Fatigue Syndrome: Allergy of the Nervous System. Charles
C. Thomas Pub. 1970: 14-27
Strauss, S.E.,
Dale J.K., Wright R.N., Metcalfe D. Allergy and the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome,
J. Allergy CLin Immunol 1988: 81(5,1): 791-795
Gislason S.J., Nutritional Therapy 1991: Personal Publ 200 1601 Yew St.
Vancouver, BC.,V6K 3E6 (604) 731-5898
Hilgers L.A.T. et al. Immunomodulating Properties of Amphilic Agents, Auto-immunity
and Toxicology 1989: 293-306
Elsvier Science Publ.
Reprinted from the MEssenger May 1992, Volune 4, Issue 4 which was reprinted
with permission by Dr. S. J. Gislason and Environmed Research Inc., 200
1601 Yew St., Vancouver, B.C. V6K 3E6.
If you are planning on leaving after
this page, please sign my guestbook. Thanks!!
 
  
All
content © 1998 - 99 by Lady Care's Realm On The Web.
All right reserved.
All other copyrights belong to their respective holders.
All
graphics © 1998 - 99
Dream Web Designs by Lady Care
All right reserved.
All other copyrights belong to their respective holders.

This background
set was made and copyrighted by Lady Care Designs.
Please do not take any of the set or the graphics.
Thank you for respecting the copyright laws.
This
page hosted by

Get Your Free Page
|