Thursday, April 8, 2021

Should You Take a Home Food Sensitivity Test?

 Written by Eris Rolves, SLU Dietetic Intern

I frequently get targeted advertisements all over my Facebook and Instagram accounts for services that provide home food sensitivity tests. Oh, the joys of being an RD to be – your search history from academic research and Googling of medical terms easily spills over into your personal Internet browsing! Like the ad intended, it caught my eye and convinced me to stop scrolling, but not for the reason you may think. I examined the ad with skepticism instead of intrigue.

These home food sensitivity tests are marketed as an easy and cost-effective way to pinpoint what foods you are supposedly intolerant to. For those of us who frequently experience unexplained gastrointestinal distress, this appears to be the answer to our prayers at first glance. No doctors appointments, invasive procedures, or additional suffering? Just fork over a couple hundred dollars to have a company analyze my blood, saliva, or hair sample and return a list of foods that make my belly hurt? Seems like a straightforward, easy solution. However, it also seems too good to be true, and I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but these home food sensitivity tests most definitely are. Allow me to dig into the details of why.


Defining “Food Sensitivity”

It’s important to keep in mind that “food sensitivity” is not a medical diagnosis. This means that there are no formal criteria for identifying a food sensitivity, so the term isn’t really recognized in medicine. What can be diagnosed, though, are food intolerances and food allergies.

A food intolerance is developed when your digestive system is unable to properly digest or absorb a certain food, causing pain or damage to the GI tract. Gluten and lactose intolerance are two common ailments that fall into this group. Chances are, your adverse reaction to a certain food is related to intolerance, not an allergy.

A food allergy is significantly more severe and stems from the immune system. In a food allergy, your body reacts to a certain food through the digestive system, respiratory system, and the skin. Anaphylaxis can even occur, which is a life-threatening side effect that can include difficulty breathing, dizziness, and/or loss of consciousness. Food allergies are serious and should be diagnosed by a physician, not a home test.

https://www.aaaai.org/conditions-and-treatments/library/allergy-library/food-intolerance

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/food-allergy/expert-answers/food-allergy/faq-20058538

Why can’t food sensitivity tests diagnose a food intolerance or allergy?

These home tests and diagnostic medical tests are not looking for the same thing. Let’s have a quick science lesson: Your immune system protects you by developing antibodies in response to outside invaders it comes in contact with. The antibodies are custom-made by your body to fight off specific invaders, and there are several types of antibodies, called immunoglobulins (abbreviated Ig). Food allergies are measured and diagnosed by the presence of IgE antibodies. It’s not entirely clear why, but IgE antibodies are made in response to proteins in certain foods that your body deems to be a threat, resulting in an extreme immune response when that food is eaten (cramps/diarrhea, vomiting, hives, swelling, anaphylaxis). Home food sensitivity tests measure the presence of IgG antibodies, which can be made in response to any food and doesn’t necessarily result in that extreme reaction from the immune system. Again, it isn’t clear why IgG antibodies are made in the first place, but most people have IgG antibodies for quite a few foods.

By measuring the presence of IgG antibodies in your sample, the test is likely to return to you a laundry list of foods you are “sensitive” to – and on top of that, foods that you probably eat regularly. This leads to people following an unnecessarily restrictive diet. Anyone with a diagnosed food allergy or intolerance can attest that having to bend over backwards to avoid their trigger foods is not enjoyable. Why do that if you don’t have to?

A more in-depth explanation of why home food sensitivity tests are not effective can be found here: https://www.jaci-inpractice.org/article/S2213-2198%2817%2930704-3/fulltext#sec2

https://www.istockphoto.com/photo/antibody-immunoglobulin-gm1219978307-357047077

If food sensitivity tests aren’t accurate, why do people feel better after following the results?

If you read the comments on the social media ads for the food sensitivity tests, you’ll scroll through hundreds of comments of people saying that the test was “the only thing that helped them figure out what was wrong with them” and they’ve “never felt better” since cutting out all the foods on their results list. How can this be? One might feel this way for a couple of reasons. First, the placebo effect. Someone who is well aware that they are trying out this new diet that’s supposed to completely alleviate their symptoms may be convinced that it’s working for a while until proven otherwise. Second, that long list of trigger foods the test generated probably did contain a problematic food or two for them, and they are successfully avoiding them along with a dozen others.

There is really no advantage to avoiding foods that do not cause an adverse reaction. Like I mentioned, these tests tend to implicate foods that you eat often, so it would be a major adjustment to remove them from your diet, and a disappointing one at that. Unless your favorite food happens to be the trigger food, a diet without the joy it brings is not recommended, nor is it a healthy one.

Additionally, eliminating too many foods from your diet can result in nutrient deficiencies, ultimately leading to more health problems. That means doctors appointments, procedures, medications to take – all of the results you were trying to avoid in the first place by taking a seemingly harmless home test. These tests market a solution to your suffering, but what you are really buying is more stress, confusion, and complicated mealtimes.

Other factors to consider…

Keep in mind that your headaches, stomach aches, GI symptoms, lethargy, and mental fog may have nothing to do with your diet. Many of these home tests market themselves as answers to general physical ailments like these. But there could be a lot of reasons you feel this way that aren’t food related. Stress from work, school, life, and major events like a global pandemic can cause you to feel less like yourself, especially when that stress is chronic. Additionally, sudden changes in lifestyle like staying at home most of the time and being less physically active can impair digestion. Sudden changes in diet can also have repercussions for your stool patterns, like an increase in fiber or caffeine intake. And, if you are having significant abdominal pain upon eating, it could be indicative of a more serious GI condition like an ulcer, an H. pylori infection, or gallstones.

What should I do instead to get to the bottom of my food issues?

If you think you are having an adverse reaction to food, the best solution is to visit your primary care physician or a registered dietitian. Your physician can refer you to an allergist to determine if you have an allergy based on clinical testing. Registered, licensed dietitians are the only healthcare providers who are able to effectively help you identify intolerances and navigate an elimination diet to narrow down any trigger foods you might have. Their goal is to find what bothers you without unnecessarily cutting out too many foods or even entire food groups.

I know that getting help from a dietitian seems like the long way to a solution and quick answers are much more attractive, especially when you’re in so much discomfort when you eat. Having digestive issues is not fun! But, think of working with an RD as “food therapy”. Working out what foods are bothering you and how to build your diet/lifestyle around that is going to take time. Anyone or anything that says otherwise should be approached with a healthy dose of skepticism. Just like you wouldn’t believe a mental health counselor who says they can cure your depression with one session, or a physical therapist that says they can relieve your pain with one exercise, or a doctor that says they can cure your cancer after just one appointment – don’t believe someone who says they can solve your stomachaches overnight.

http://www.carlehealthfitness.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/dietician.jpg

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