Advertisement
DO THIS:TEST/QUIZ YOURSELFGREAT DIET GUIDESI WANT TO...
 DietDoc's articles
Allergic to wheat?

Does your nose drip and your stomach growl with cramps? Do you itch all over or suffer from constant nausea? Any one of these unpleasant symptoms, or all of them, can be caused by a wheat allergy. Although diagnosis of wheat allergy is relatively uncommon, many people probably suffer from this allergy without being aware of it.

Advertisement
Why do people react to wheat?
Although wheat is a grain and a rich source of carbohydrates, it also contains some protein. The protein in wheat, like all proteins, is made up of building blocks called amino acids. The major amino acids in wheat are called albumin, globulin, gliadin and glutelin (gluten).

Wheat allergy is usually linked to the albumin and globulin amino acids in wheat. When these amino acids enter the body through the digestive system or the lungs, the immune system reacts by making so-called immunoglobulin E antibodies. These antibodies then cause the actual symptoms of runny nose, wheezing, skin reactions, nausea and diarrhoea.

What’s the difference between wheat allergy and coeliac disease?
It is important to remember that wheat allergy differs from the condition called coeliac disease, which is a hereditary illness. People who are allergic to wheat develop symptoms after eating products that contain wheat or if they inhale wheat flour (baker’s asthma). While patients with coeliac disease are sensitive to wheat from birth, wheat allergy can develop at any stage of life.

Why am I suddenly allergic to bread?
Some people can eat a food like bread for years without any ill effects and then suddenly one day develop the symptoms of wheat allergy. This is not due to an overnight change, but a gradual build-up of wheat antibodies over time. When the level of wheat antibodies reaches a critical level in the body of wheat-sensitive individuals they start to develop respiratory, gastrointestinal, or skin reactions.

Is wheat allergy common?
According to statistics, wheat allergy is supposed to be relatively uncommon, but there may be many more sufferers out there who are not even aware of the fact that they are allergic to wheat.

In the baking industry where people are constantly exposed to fine wheat particles in the air, wheat allergy can affect up to 30% of workers. These patients usually develop respiratory symptoms or baker’s asthma.

What symptoms should I look out for?

The main symptoms of wheat allergy are:

  • skin reactions - eczema, itchy skin, and hives
  • digestive reactions - abdominal cramps, bloating, nausea and in severe cases, vomiting
  • respiratory tract - asthma, runny or blocked nose, post-nasal drip, cough, wheezy chest

Dietary treatment of wheat allergy
If you suffer from confirmed wheat allergy, the most important thing you can do is of course to avoid foods that contain wheat. This is easier said than done.

Because wheat is one of mankind’s staple foods that humans have been eating for millennia, it is particularly difficult to avoid all wheat-containing foods. In addition, modern food processing methods use various forms of wheat in hundreds, if not thousands, of foods (see List of Label Ingredients below).

A wheat-free diet is very restricted and individuals who are highly allergic can basically eat only unprocessed fruit, vegetables, meat, poultry, fish, eggs, milk and dairy products, nuts, fats and oils.

Unless you suffer from so-called "cross-reactivity", which means that you also react to other cereals, you should at least be able to eat rye bread, breakfast cereals made from oats or maize, and barley. Other cereals which are safe, include rice, and maize, and products made from rice and maize like rice cakes, rice flour, maize meal, samp, crushed maize and maize porridge.

How to avoid wheat-containing foods
In the modern world, wheat and ingredients derived from wheat are used in practically every kind of processed food. For example, soup power is usually thickened with wheat flour, and commercial sauces contain vegetable gum that may, or may not, be derived from wheat.

To be safe, it’s best to read the labels of each and every processed food you purchase. Be on the lookout for the following ingredients that indicate that the food contains wheat:

List of wheat-containing label ingredients

  • Bread crumbs
  • Bran or whole-wheat flour, wheat bran, wheat germ, wheat gluten, wheat malt or wheat starch
  • Cereal extract
  • Couscous
  • Cracker meal
  • Semolina
  • Flour and enriched flour, high-protein flour
  • Gluten, high-gluten flour and vital gluten

The following ingredients can also be derived from wheat flour and may thus contain wheat proteins, which could cause an allergic reaction: Gelatinised starch, hydrolysed vegetable protein, modified food starch, modified starch, natural flavouring, soya sauce, starch, vegetable gum or starch.

Will I get a vitamin deficiency?
Cereals and bread are important sources of dietary fibre, vitamins, especially the B vitamins and minerals. To make sure that you or your child, do not develop deficiencies if you have to cut all wheat-containing foods out your diet, it is advisable to consult a clinical dietician to work out a wheat-free diet for you.

Dieticians are listed in the telephone directory or get your doctor, clinic or hospital to refer you. In some cases it may also be necessary to take B complex supplements to make up for the lack of B vitamins in a wheat-free diet.

Living with an allergy to wheat is not easy, but by taking basic precautions you should be able to avoid the unpleasant symptoms of this food-linked condition. - (Dr I.V. van Heerden, DietDoc)

Any questions? Ask DietDoc

 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent

 
Previous article: Next article:
Gluten sensitivity Help for milk intolerance
Sign up
 *Daily tip
 Newsletter
 Special offers
*Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!
 OTHER ARTICLES
Cystic fibrosis and your diet
The balanced diet
Protein facts
More protein facts
Are we eating too much protein?
More on protein for sports fanatics
Protein and sports performance
The glycaemic index
How to use the glycaemic index
GI values of common foods
Glycaemic index: unresolved issues
Carbo facts for sports fanatics
GI considerations for sports fanatics
Carbo-loading considered
Do I really need supplements?
Supplements can make a difference
Magnesium – essential to supplement
Coenzyme Q10 - is it important for health?
Do we need fats?
Omega-3 vs. omega-6
Debunking canola myths
Don’t poison your guests
Destructive images of beauty
How to help anorexics and bulimics
Nutrition and behaviour
Investigating binge eating disorder
How to treat binge eating disorder
Tips on gaining weight
More weight-gaining tips
Bulimia - the hidden scourge
Protect yourself against food allergies
Allergic to preservatives?
Allergic to potatoes?
Gluten sensitivity
Allergic to wheat?
New products can help milk intolerance
Diet lessons from Survivor
Breakfast – the most frequently missed meal
Are employers responsible for bad eating habits?
Detox diet
Hypoglycaemia and what to do about it
More tips on gaining weight
Snack tax to combat obesity?
Post-op liquid diets
Body pH: A delicate balance
GI and sports nutrition
Big bums and micro-fat surgery
Starvation diets and exercise
5-a-day for better health
Are you drinking too much water?
Refuting dietary myths
Jaw wring a no-no
The dangers of high-protein slimming diets
A - Z of L-carnitine
Survivor: starvation diets
PMS and diet
Diet tips for office workers
More diet tips for office workers
Osteoporosis and your diet
Combat childhood obesity
Healthy snack and lunchbox ideas
Planning healthy snacks
Many SA kids obese
Diets for toddlers
More on diets for toddlers
Diet and healthy teeth
Fussy kid? Here's help
Menus for toddlers (1-3 years)
Diets for preschool children
More diet tips for preschoolers
Menus for preschool kids
Diets for kids aged 7-10 years
Diets for schoolkids: Problem areas
Kids: obesity, hyperactivity, allergies
How diet influences your baby’s life
What moms should eat
Essential nutrients for pregnancy
Pregnancy nutrition tips
Pregnancy and drinking: what's the limit?
Eat fish during pregnancy
Weight gain during pregnancy
Confusion about pregnancy diets
Menopause, osteoporosis and your diet
Reduce heart disease, cancer risk
Weight gain during menopause
SLE and diet
Dietary fibre - how to prevent constipation
The case for fibre
Dietary guidelines for gout
Protein & sodium restriction
Taking thyroid supplements
Iodine and the thyroid gland
Diet tips to stay young
More on diet and SLE
Diet and your nervous system
The nervous system: Other B-vitamins
Minerals and your nervous system
Diet and Alzheimer’s disease
Dietary support for Alzheimer’s
Diet and cognitive function in old age
Beware of trans-fatty acids
Diet & your brain: appetite
Diet & your brain: aggression
B vitamins against Alzheimer's
Thwart Alzheimer's with B12
Psychiatry: Drug-food interactions
Pre- and probiotics boost immunity
Soya and L-glutamine ups immunity
Micronutrients boost immunity
Fight flu with these foods
Eating your way to a healthy colon
Sensible colon practices
What are probiotics?
The benefits of probiotics
Meat, fish and eggs - How much is enough?
How much milk and dairy should we eat?
Diet fallacies
Are you ready to lose weight?
How much weight should you lose?
How fast can you lose weight?
Weight loss: Will you succeed?
7 factors that prevent weight loss
Yo-Yo dieting = weight gain
The lowdown on cellulite
Those tummies, thighs and hips!
Don't skip breakfast
Surviving the silly season
Are you a diet fanatic?
The obese personality
When ads entice you to eat
Parents and partners
'Fat Girls & Feeders' shock
Obesity, eating disorders and depression
Slimming: The psychiatric effect
The secret of weight loss revealed
Dietary fibre helps slimmers
Slimming diet
Exercise a potent slimming aid
Diet pills can be deadly
Diets don’t work
Obesity: Simple solutions
How to shop for your slimming diet
Why exercise promotes weight loss
Am I obese?
Obesity and diseases
Fad diets: dangers to avoid
GI considerations for sports fans
Prevent weight gain
Sensational diet and food stories
The confusion about fats
Soy - healthy or harmful?
Coconut meat, milk: healthy or not?
IGF-1: what we know
The lowdown on GM foods
More on GM foods
SA labelling of GM foods
Do diabetics need supplements?
The fructose controversy
Obesity: not a simple issue
More factors that influence obesity
The great Sutherlandia debate
Stop feeling guilty about food
New cookbook for diabetics
Survivor: the seduction of food
ARVs vs. weight loss
Body build: endomorphs vs. ectomorphs
Male weight loss considered
Storm in a bowl of cornflakes?
Glucosamine, CS: arthritis help?
Antioxidants: powerful protectors
Caffeine - good or bad?
An obesity vaccine in the making
Getting to the root of bowel pain
Manto's utterances debunked
Sugar's effect on cholesterol
Survivors need a balanced diet!
Survivor SA: balanced diet best
Survivor SA: the power of comfort food
Treating the trots
Dieting: what 2006 taught us
Too much of a good thing
Dieting on the cheap
Budget dinners for dieters
The CWC and your boep
Are vitamin supplements fatal?
Weight loss whackos
Drinking a mineral overload?
3-Apple-a-Day diet gets thumbs-up
Gallbladder op? Control your weight
Are we running out of milk?
SA couch potatoes in danger
Should food additives be banned?
Diet lessons from 2007
Biggest Loser SA: are you watching?
Who is the biggest loser?
Biggest Loser SA: signs of progress
Biggest Loser men reach a plateau
Guilt trip for Biggest Losers
Biggest Loser ladies are losing out
Great tips from Loser's Gerna
More diet truths from Biggest Loser
Weight loss a lifetime commitment
Thank heaven for trainers!
Weight loss highs and lows
Losers, we salute you!
We have a winner
Food crisis in SA
Have another cup of tea
The miracle of vitamin D
First meal is life-changing
The Fertility Diet
Diabetic diet no longer dull
Fussy child, unhealthy adult
Nutrition crisis in SA
Morbid obesity – is surgery the only solution?
Melamine scandal: are we at risk?
2008: A year of diet revelations
Sunshine good for MS patients
To drink or not to drink
Probiotics help for bowel disease
Sleep apnoea? Lose weight
SA kids 5th-fattest in the world
Prevent first-year spread
Food price fixing bleeding us dry
Soy foods may cause infertility
Sleep yourself thin
The cranberry cure
 

Advertisement

 Sponsored links
 Health24 links