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ALLERGYCARE- Comments Please ?

Question:
'Allergycare' is a business based in Taunton, Somerset, England. They 'advise' on the individual's sensitivity to foods, drinks and additives following a test using a conductivity meter of some kind. The tests are often carried out at you local Pharmacy for £30 to £39 depending if you are also tested for mineral and vitamin deficiency or not. An 'elimination' diet is then proposed and you are left to get on with without further supervision. Does any one have knowledge of the scientific principles behind these 'conductivity' tests and the success rate of the advised food sensitivity and mineral/vitamin deficiency so determined. I'd like to know the prospects for success before rigidly following the proposals and embarking on a major change to my feeding habits and consequential disruption to the family food preparation zone?


Answer:
I suffer from "idiopathic anaphylaxis" (i.e. I get full anaphylactic shock episodes where the cause is unknown - 3 times in 2 months). Given that even skin prick tests, blood RAST tests and so on are not conclusive, I would somehow doubt the validity of this. If you are badly allergic to something, then the surest way is to go on some form of elimination diet, and then if you think you have isolated the troublesome beastie (and it does not cause you to have a life-threatening problem, like mine), then you can then do the "challenge test" and re-introduce it, and "prove to yourself" that the eliminated item really causes the problem. This is quite a long term tricky thing to do. The guys who will test you for "100 things you may be allergic to" will almost without doubt come up with something - they will give you a tailored diet, and you most likely will feel better. However, a better diet will make just about ALL of use feel better!!!!! It is hard to say whether the elimination of something you may be mildly allergic to is what's making you feel better. (Also, repeat testing etc may well give false positives and false negatives ... it's not a complete science yet ...) As an example, my elimination diet (to try to find my trigger to anaphylactic shock) was a complete salicylate free diet (that is, none of the natural "aspirin-like" compounds), no farmed animal products, no herbs or spices. This meant, no meat, no dairy products, no fresh fruit or any vegetables except potatos and leaf veg (i.e.l spinach, broccoli, cabbage). No tea, coffee, beer, wine, cider etc etc ... only pure bottled water. The end product - zilch! I am eating as per normal - waiting for the next episode (and down to the A&E for treatment when it happens, of course!!!) - and getting on with life as normal. So far so good. What does your GP say? I was under a consultant dietician, a consultant dermatologist and now a consultant immunologist. The bottom line is to take the advice of a professional. Note the NHS is going to get more money for allergy clinics, so at last it is being recognised as a problem! It's a scam.



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