Alcohol Can Worsen The Effects Of Allergies
Posted on Wednesday, 21st April 2010 - 5:20 pm by Devon Allergy Clinic
Filed under: asthma.
Alcohol can worsen the
effects of allergies
Two studies have found that
alcohol can cause or worsen the common symptoms of asthma
and hay fever like sneezing, itching headaches and coughing.
But the problem is not always
the alcohol itself. Beer, wine and some spirits contain
histamine, produced by yeast and bacteria during the fermentation
process. Histamine, of course, is the chemical that sets off
allergy symptoms. Wine and beer also contain sulfites, another
group of compounds known to provoke asthma and other allergy-like
symptoms.
In one study in
Sweden in 2005,(1) scientists looked at thousands of
people and found that compared with the general population, those
with diagnoses of asthma, bronchitis and
hay fever were far more likely to experience sneezing, a runny
nose
and “lower-airway symptoms” after having a drink. Red
wine and white wine were the most frequent triggers, and women,
for unknown reasons, were about twice as likely to be affected as
men.
Another
study of thousands of women published in the journal
Clinical and
Experimental Allergy in 2008 (2) found that having
more than two glasses of wine a day almost doubles the risk of
allergy symptoms, even among women who were free of seasonal and
perennial
allergies at the start of the study.
It is also helpful to be
aware of foods that either release
or contain histamine, like aged cheeses, pickled or
fermented products and yeast-containing foods, like bread, cider
and grapes.
(1) Respir
Med. 2005 Jun;99(6):762-9. Epub 2005 Jan
21.Alcohol-induced upper airway symptoms: prevalence and
co-morbidity.
Nihlen
U,
Greiff
LJ,
Nyberg
P,
Persson
CG,
Andersson
M.
(2)Clin
Exp Allergy. 2008 Jul;38(7):1179-85. Epub 2008 Feb
20.Alcohol consumption and the risk of self-reported perennial
and seasonal allergic rhinitis in young adult women in a
population-based cohort study.Bendtsen
P,
Grønbaek M,
Kjaer SK,
Munk C,
Linneberg A,
Tolstrup JS.Centre
for Alcohol Research, National Institute of Public Health, Øster
Farimagsgade Copenhagen, University of Southern Denmark,
Denmark.
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