Tree nut allergy

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Tree nut allergy
Hazelnuts, a type of tree nut
SpecialtyImmunology Edit this on Wikidata
Differential diagnosisPeanut allergy

A tree nut allergy is a hypersensitivity to

shea nuts and walnuts.[note 1]

Management is by avoiding eating the causal nuts or foods that contain them among their ingredients, and a prompt treatment if there is an accidental ingestion.[2] Total avoidance is complicated because the declaration of the presence of trace amounts of allergens in foods is not mandatory in every country.[3][4][5]

Tree nut allergies are distinct from

legumes
, whereas a tree nut is a hard-shelled nut.

Signs and symptoms

Signs and symptoms of anaphylaxis
Signs and symptoms of anaphylaxis

Food allergies in general usually have an onset of symptoms in the range of minutes to hours for an immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated response, which may include anaphylaxis.[6] Symptoms may include rash, hives, itching of mouth, lips, tongue, throat, eyes, skin, or other areas, swelling of lips, tongue, eyelids, or the whole face, difficulty swallowing, runny or congested nose, hoarse voice, wheezing, shortness of breath, diarrhea, abdominal pain, lightheadedness, fainting, nausea, or vomiting.[7] Non-IgE-mediated responses occur hours to days after consuming the allergenic food, and are not as severe as IgE-mediated symptoms. Symptoms of allergies vary from person to person and incident to incident.[7]

Potentially life-threatening, the anaphylactic onset of an allergic reaction is characterized by respiratory distress, as indicated by wheezing, breathing difficulty, and

anaphylactic shock.[9]

Consumption of raw nuts usually causes a more severe reaction than roasted nuts or food-grade nut oils, as processing can reduce the integrity of the allergic proteins.[10]

Causes

Diagnosis

An allergy test or food challenge may be performed at an allergy clinic to determine the exact allergens.

Since a tree nut allergy can be life threatening, people who suspect they are having allergic reactions to any kind of tree nut should be tested by an allergist immediately.[11] Tree nut allergies can be genetic and passed down.[12] Skin-prick tests and blood tests may be used to determine if an allergy is present. Tests can reveal the presence of immunoglobulin E (IgE), an antibody that responds to allergens and triggers the release of chemicals which cause the symptoms.[11]

If the test results are inconclusive, there is also an oral food challenge. This test consists of feeding the patient tiny amounts of the food that they believe is causing their allergy reactions. This is done under direct supervision of the allergist.[11]

Prevention

Prevention involves an exclusion

cross contamination.[14]

Cross-reactivity

People with clinically confirmed tree nut allergy to one type of tree nut may have cross-reactivity to other tree nut species and also to peanuts, which are not nuts but rather part of the legume family.[15][16] The cause is similarity in protein structures. Identifiable allergenic proteins are grouped into families: cupins, prolamins, profilin and others. Tree nuts have proteins in these families, as do peanuts and other legumes.[15] Reviews of human trials report that for a confirmed tree nut allergy, up to one third of people will react to more than one type of tree nut. The cross reactivity among almond, walnut, pecan, hazelnut and Brazil nut is stronger than cross reactivity of these toward cashew or pistachio.[16]

People with tree nut allergy are seldom allergic to just one type of nut,[17][18] and are therefore usually advised to avoid all tree nuts, even though an individual may not be allergic to the nuts of all species of trees.

Someone allergic to walnuts or pecans may not have an allergy to cashews or pistachios, because the two groups are only distantly related and do not necessarily share related allergenic proteins.[19]

Prognosis

This allergy tends to be lifelong; studies have shown that only about 9% of children outgrow their tree nut allergy.[13]

Treatment

Epinephrine autoinjectors are portable single-dose epinephrine-dispensing devices used to treat anaphylaxis.

Strict dietary avoidance of the causal nut(s) remains the mainstay of treatment for nut-allergic individuals.

epinephrine pen, which is an injection device designed to be used by a non-healthcare professional when emergency treatment is warranted.[21]

Regulation

Whether food allergy prevalence is increasing or not, food allergy awareness has increased, with impacts on the quality of life for children, their parents and their immediate caregivers.[22][23][24][25] In the United States, the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act enacted August 2004, effective January 1, 2006, causes people to be reminded of allergy problems every time they handle a food package, and restaurants have added allergen warnings to menus.[26] The Culinary Institute of America, a premier school for chef training, has courses in allergen-free cooking and a separate teaching kitchen.[27] School systems have protocols about what foods can be brought into the school. Despite all these precautions, people with serious allergies are aware that accidental exposure can easily occur at other peoples' houses, at school or in restaurants.[28]

Regulation of labeling

An example of a list of allergens in a food item

In response to the risk that certain foods pose to those with food allergies, some countries have responded by instituting labeling laws that require food products to clearly inform consumers if their products contain major allergens or byproducts of major allergens among the ingredients intentionally added to foods. Nevertheless, there are no labeling laws to mandatory declare the presence of trace amounts in the final product as a consequence of cross-contamination, except in Brazil.[5]

[26][29][30][31][32][4][3]

Ingredients intentionally added

FALCPA requires companies to disclose on the label whether a packaged food product contains any of these eight major food allergens, added intentionally: cow's milk, peanuts, eggs, shellfish, fish, tree nuts, soy and wheat.[26] This list originated in 1999 from the World Health Organisation Codex Alimentarius Commission.[4] To meet FALCPA labeling requirements, if an ingredient is derived from one of the required-label allergens, then it must either have its "food sourced name" in parentheses, for example "Casein (milk)," or as an alternative, there must be a statement separate but adjacent to the ingredients list: "Contains milk" (and any other of the allergens with mandatory labeling).[26][30] The European Union requires listing for those eight major allergens plus molluscs, celery, mustard, lupin, sesame and sulfites.[29]

FALCPA applies to packaged foods regulated by the FDA, which does not include poultry, most meats, certain egg products, and most alcoholic beverages.[3] However, some meat, poultry, and egg processed products may contain allergenic ingredients. These products are regulated by the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), which requires that any ingredient be declared in the labeling only by its common or usual name. Neither the identification of the source of a specific ingredient in a parenthetical statement nor the use of statements to alert for the presence of specific ingredients, like "Contains: milk", are mandatory according to FSIS.[31][32] FALCPA also does not apply to food prepared in restaurants.[33][34] The EU Food Information for Consumers Regulation 1169/2011 – requires food businesses to provide allergy information on food sold unpackaged, for example, in catering outlets, deli counters, bakeries and sandwich bars.[35]

Trace amounts as a result of cross-contamination

The value of allergen labeling other than for intentional ingredients is controversial. This concerns labeling for ingredients present unintentionally as a consequence of cross-contact or cross-contamination at any point along the food chain (during raw material transportation, storage or handling, due to shared equipment for processing and packaging, etc.).[4][3] Experts in this field propose that if allergen labeling is to be useful to consumers, and healthcare professionals who advise and treat those consumers, ideally there should be agreement on which foods require labeling, threshold quantities below which labeling may be of no purpose, and validation of allergen detection methods to test and potentially recall foods that were deliberately or inadvertently contaminated.[36][37]

Labeling regulations have been modified to provide for mandatory labeling of ingredients plus voluntary labeling, termed precautionary allergen labeling (PAL), also known as “may contain” statements, for possible, inadvertent, trace amount, cross-contamination during production.[4][38] PAL labeling can be confusing to consumers, especially as there can be many variations on the wording of the warning.[38][39] As of 2014 PAL is regulated only in Switzerland, Japan, Argentina, and South Africa. Argentina decided to prohibit precautionary allergen labeling since 2010, and instead puts the onus on the manufacturer to control the manufacturing process and label only those allergenic ingredients known to be in the products. South Africa does not permit the use of PAL, except when manufacturers demonstrate the potential presence of allergen due to cross-contamination through a documented risk assessment and despite adherence to Good Manufacturing Practice.[4] In Australia and New Zealand there is a recommendation that PAL be replaced by guidance from VITAL 2.0 (Vital Incidental Trace Allergen Labeling). A review identified "the eliciting dose for an allergic reaction in 1% of the population" as ED01. This threshold reference dose for foods (such as cow's milk, egg, peanut and other proteins) will provide food manufacturers with guidance for developing precautionary labeling and give consumers a better idea of might be accidentally in a food product beyond "may contain."[40][41] VITAL 2.0 was developed by the Allergen Bureau, a food industry sponsored, non-government organization.[42] The European Union has initiated a process to create labeling regulations for unintentional contamination but is not expected to publish such before 2024.[43]

In Brazil since April 2016, the declaration of the possibility of cross-contamination is mandatory when the product does not intentionally add any allergenic food or its derivatives, but the Good Manufacturing Practices and allergen control measures adopted are not sufficient to prevent the presence of accidental trace amounts. These allergens include wheat, rye, barley, oats and their hybrids, crustaceans, eggs, fish, peanuts, soybean, milk of all species of mammalians, almonds, hazelnuts, cashew nuts, Brazil nuts, macadamia nuts, walnuts, pecan nuts, pistaches, pine nuts, and chestnuts.[5]

Society and culture

Food fear has a significant impact on quality of life.[24][25] For children with allergies, quality of life is also affected by actions of their peers. There is an increased occurrence of bullying, which can include threats or acts of deliberately being touched with foods they need to avoid, also having their allergen-free food deliberately contaminated.[44]

Research

Immunotherapy treatments are being developed for tree nut allergy, including oral immunotherapy, sublingual immunotherapy, and epicutaneous immunotherapy.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. indehiscent fruits. See the article about nuts
    for more information.

References

  1. ^ "Tree nut allergy". Food Allergy Research and Education.
  2. ^
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  3. ^ a b c d FDA (18 December 2017). "Food Allergies: What You Need to Know". Food and Drug Administration. Retrieved 12 January 2018.
  4. ^
    PMID 24791183
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  5. ^ a b c "Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária Guia sobre Programa de Controle de Alergênicos" (in Portuguese). Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária (ANVISA). 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  6. ^
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  7. ^ a b c MedlinePlus Encyclopedia: Food allergy
  8. PMID 28780941
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  11. ^ a b c "Tree Nut | Causes, Symptoms & Treatment". ACAAI Public Website.
  12. ^ "All About Allergies (For Parents) - Nemours Kidshealth".
  13. ^ a b National Institutes of Health, NIAID Allergy Statistics. "Food Allergy Quick Facts". Archived from the original on April 6, 2010. Retrieved December 18, 2011.
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  26. ^ a b c d "Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act of 2004". US Food and Drug Administration. 2 August 2004. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  27. ^ Culinary Institute of America Allergen-free oasis comes to the CIA (2017)
  28. PMID 18751571
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  29. ^ a b "Food allergen labelling and information requirements under the EU Food Information for Consumers Regulation No. 1169/2011: Technical Guidance" Archived 2017-07-07 at the Wayback Machine (April 2015).
  30. ^ a b FDA (14 December 2017). "Have Food Allergies? Read the Label". Food and Drug Administration. Retrieved 14 January 2018.
  31. ^ a b "Food Ingredients of Public Health Concern" (PDF). United States Department of Agriculture. Food Safety and Inspection Service. 7 March 2017. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
  32. ^ a b "Allergies and Food Safety". United States Department of Agriculture. Food Safety and Inspection Service. 1 December 2016. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
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  34. ^ FDA (18 July 2006). "Food Allergen Labeling And Consumer Protection Act of 2004 Questions and Answers". Food and Drug Administration. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  35. ^ "Allergy and intolerance: guidance for businesses". Archived from the original on 2014-12-08. Retrieved 2014-12-12.
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  42. ^ The VITAL Program Allergen Bureau, Australia and New Zealand.
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External links