I continue to receive a lot of questions about the status of my histamine intolerance, an issue that I only realized WAS an issue after I went Paleo in 2012. Histamine intolerance isn’t discussed too frequently in the Paleo community but I suspect that more and more people are considering it as part of their health puzzle based on the increase in members of histamine intolerance Facebook groups, inquiries from readers and number of organic search referrals I receive for people Googling it. I won’t discuss the symptoms for histamine intolerance in this post, but I will send you over to this one I wrote in 2014: Is Histamine Intolerance Your Missing Link?
The day of my wedding I feared I would have a histamine reaction at my own wedding dinner! In fact, the weather that day was so bad, that the stress of possibly canceling my outdoor yacht ceremony was so high that my face started swelling even without food in me! Thankfully, I had thought ahead to bring a cooling face mask and turned the lights off in my room and meditated for 10 minutes. The inflammation calmed down shortly after.
I was diagnosed with Hashimoto’s in 2008 at age 19 and had experienced some food reactions for the two years prior, specifically to monosodium glutamate (MSG) and sodium benzoate. I’ve always preferred to prepare my own food, so I wasn’t exposed to these artificial ingredients often but when I was the consequences were grave – weeks of depression, fevers, rashes, and food fear. In 2012, I had an exercise-induced anaphylactic reaction to fried fish when I was visiting family in Canada. I had been dealing with new GI symptoms for the 6 months prior to that day, but this reaction was so scary I decided I needed to see a specialist. I had a feeling my food reactions were connected to my gut health and not a spontaneous new allergy that I would be dealing with for the rest of my life. To this day I do not know what caused that reaction but there was clearly a massive release of histamine that my body did not handle nicely. It turned out that anaphylaxis led to a positive outcome: finding a physician who recommended I try the Paleo diet to see if my gut issues improved.
It’s not common for adults to develop immediate reaction IgE-mediated food allergies as most are diagnosed in childhood (think of the kid whose throat swells up when he wipes his mouth with a peanut-contaminated napkin). But an increasing number of adults are developing food hypersensitivities and delayed reactions often times a result of increased intestinal permeability and/or autoimmune disease. This is why you find people on the autoimmune protocol who also have to eliminate AIP-friendly foods like cauliflower or carob because those foods showed up on food sensitivity/intolerance panels. We may call them allergies, but they are not IgE-mediated immediate immune responses. They’re delayed food intolerances that may cause some of the same symptoms of a Type I allergy response but generally less severe and symptoms may only present 2 or 3 days after exposure. These symptoms can affect the same systems as a Type I allergy such as the respiratory and gastrointestinal tract, but they usually won’t send you to the hospital. So while my food intolerances were getting out of hand in 2012 to 2014, so were my histamine intolerance symptoms. In tandem, they worsened and worsened until my tolerable food list was limited to chicken, butternut squash, fresh herbs, carrots, and coconut oil.
My histamine intolerance symptoms really started ramping up after that event in 2012 and became progressively worse by 2014. It seemed I reacted to every food remotely high in histamine and suddenly my leftovers for lunch were making me sick within an hour of consuming them. My face and hands would swell, I would get a headache, feel extremely exhausted after eating the offending food, and mood swings were the norm. Around this time I also got food sensitivity panels done and my yellow list (mild intolerances) was incredibly long (30+ foods) and about 10 foods between the moderate and severe lists. I remember the week before my wedding in July 2014, I was reacting to everything – even drinking fountain water. I couldn’t even tolerate meat that had been cooked just 2 hours prior (since the histamine content of meat rises once cooked). It was getting ridiculous and I was so sick of either batch cooking all my very simply prepared (and boring) foods and freezing them immediately in individual containers to prevent histamine build-up OR cooking all of my meals fresh 3 times a day! I was determined to get these histamine intolerance symptoms under control because they were affecting my quality of life in every sense of the word. I was very religious about removing all of these offending foods for the recommended six months (and the severe ones for over a year) and I am now able to enjoy those foods again without reaction. Interestingly, as my tolerance for my previously intolerable foods increased, my tolerance for high histamine foods increased too! That is some very non-controlled, case-study based proof that the cause of my histamine intolerance was likely rooted in gut dysbiosis and leaky gut, similar to my food intolerances.
When I was trying to heal my gut, I had been nervous to get on a regular probiotic regimen as I didn’t know whether or not probiotics would make my symptoms better or worse since some can increase histamine in the gut. I had had poor reactions to probiotics in the past, but knew that I had to change my gut biome if I wanted my symptoms to improve. After all, histamine only became an issue when my leaky gut hit its peak. I religiously took histamine-degrading probiotics twice a day, included 1 green juice in my diet each day, and maintained a low histamine diet for a long time (probably 9 months). Slowly and slowly (and ever so slowly) I began to see a decrease in my symptoms. I went from not being able to tolerate avocados, salmon, or olives (to name a few) to being able to enjoy them by themselves in small amounts, and then in different meals in a 24-hour period, and then to eating them all in the same bowl with no reactions at all! I know that my dedication to eating anti-inflammatory foods most days like parsley, cilantro and lemon and gut-healing bone broth, l-glutamine, and gelatin were big factors in my healing.
A year later, I had conquered a very severe Hashimoto’s flare while still healing my histamine intolerance at the same time. Anecdotal proof that despite hiccups in my healing journey, I still came out on the other side better than I was before. I am at a much healthier weight now and have more positive eating behaviors now that I don’t live in fear that a seemingly harmless food choice could leave me feeling cruddy for days. I rarely wake up with a histamine hangover anymore, thank goodness! A hangover without the drinking the night prior is just not fair!
I truly woke up one day and realized, “Hey facial swelling hasn’t been a daily occurrence in weeks and I haven’t had to ask my husband to rub my temples because I had a headache in I can’t even remember when.” Around that time, my digestion also started to improve and I no longer was waking up with painful bloating in my lower abdomen every morning. The drastic decrease in histamine intolerance symptoms has truly been my greatest achievement while following AIP because they were so life altering. I continue to be unable to tolerate fermented foods (those tend to be highest in histamine) such as kombucha and sauerkraut and I can only enjoy smoked salmon in 2-ounce quantities. And alcohol? Forget about it. But that’s okay – I know more healing will come in time and right now I’m relishing in my new ability to eat fresh salmon multiple times a week, avocado on every salad, and bananas in my smoothies.
And if I do have any symptoms crop up (they tend to flare during stressful situations like traveling or moving), I know exactly what to do to nip them in the bud. So I encourage any of you dealing with histamine intolerance or food intolerance to be patient as healing and re-balancing the gut takes time. It may seem like you’re “stuck” this way forever but just remember a time when you were well. I’ve done that many, many times as a coping mechanism during my dealings with Hashimoto’s, histamine intolerance, and hormonal balance, and it always gives me hope that I will be able to restore my health to what it was once before. If you deal with histamine intolerance and would like support, please email me at alaena@grazedandenthused.com. I am not a medical professional and cannot diagnose or treat, but I can share with you my stories and encourage perseverance in finding a solution.
27 Responses
Alaena thank you so much for sharing this post. It’s exactly what I’m going through and it really gives me so much hope to read that you overcame these issues. You are wonderful!
You are so welcome, Drew! I wish you the best of luck! You’ve got this! xo
Thanks for sharing this. I suffer from Hashimoto’s and histamine intolerance. I am not able to have bone broth or gelatin, because of the histamines. I hope to someday! Same with fish.
Thank you SO much for this post and for this website. I am forever grateful. I have Hashimoto’s and Histimine Intolerance. I have not had a food sensitivity test done but I am doing a 30-day low-histamine diet to see if I can find the worst offenders for myself.
I cook all of my meals at home and follow the HI protocol to the letter. I even called the chef when my husband and I had to attend an important black-tie dinner last night. I explained my situation and they brought me my own special dinner. Unfortunately, there must have been something in it, because I had swollen lips when I woke up this morning….something that hasn’t happened since I began the HI protocol. Ugh.
So, here’s my BIG question. Our family has a trip to Disney World planned for next month. At one point, a couple weeks ago, I almost canceled the trip out of absolute fear. But, I’d like to keep our plan (we made the plan before these awful symptoms appeared). Any advice on what in the world to eat while I am there for 5 days? I am terrified….
I would get a hotel with a good size fridge or kitchen so you can prepare some of your own food. For low histamine convenience foods, think veggies. Lots of green juice, carrots, celery, cucumbers, radishes. For protein, stay away from aged steak or seafood at restaurants. Chicken is usually defrosted and should be a safe bet. If you need carbs, you may want to shop for some sweet potatoes if your place has a microwave, that way you have a source of carbs which isn’t easy at a restaurant unless you order plain white rice.
Thank you so much for your reply! The trip was wonderful and I was able to order foods from an organic grocery and have them delivered right to our resort. Everything was wonderful! 🙂
Which histamine-degrading probiotics did you use? Thanks!
I no longer need to base my probiotics on that since I don’t have HIT anymore but you can reference this article: https://wholenewmom.com/health-concerns/low-histamine-probiotics/
I LOVE that you don’t have Histamine Intolerance any more! That gives me so much hope. What would you say was the biggest contributing factor to resolving your issues? I would love to try some of the same protocols.
: )
Hi Melissa – Gut healing for sure! I worked with a functional doctor to do gut stool testing and he prescribed particular probiotics to help as well as digestive enzymes. Making sure you are not overmedicated or undermedicated on T3 is important too (if you are medicated for hypothyroidism).
Alaena, do you take the Ortho Molecular D-Hist with or without food?
I noticed that vinegar is on the list of foods to avoid. Does that include Apple Cider Vinegar? I’m trying to figure out a way to make salad dressing, but since vinegar and citrus are off limits, I’m trying to figure out what I can mix with oil to make a dressing; or how I can make a ranch-style dressing without dairy.
You may tolerate small amounts of it or replace it with lemon or lime juice – testing amounts to find out your own limits! I have a Dairy Free Ranch Dressing in my cookbook The Healing Kitchen 🙂
Hi Alaena, Curiously, during your healing process, when were you able to tolerate bone broth and gelatin?
Inspirational stuff – wonderful to see someone has gone through this journey — and survived and thrived! I am just starting this journey and this has given me motivation to have patience
“And if I do have any symptoms crop up (they tend to flare during stressful situations like traveling or moving), I know exactly what to do to nip them in the bud”
Could you please share some details around that – I assume its around meditation?
Hi Alaena, I am also curious about how you used gelatin to heal your gut, as it is not recommended for histamine intolerances. What form of gelatin did you use and how/when did you introduce it?
It’s very unique to each individual – I could do small amounts of grass-fed gelatin in the context of an otherwise low histamine diet
Thank you for sharing your story! Did your doctors have any idea why you were reacting to water? I’m having the same problem (in addition to reacting to food and any vitamin or supplement I take).
Can you please provide info or references about overmedicating for hypothyroid and MCAS? I have found research to state that Thyroid hormone and their metabolites modulates and are modulated by mast cell but I would like to know how to proceed with that information in a clinically relevant way.
The information I obtained is from The Paleo Approach by Dr. Sarah Ballantyne and she cites all of her materials! She may have some updated blog posts for free on her website thepaleomom.com
Bless you for posting your story!! I was just diagnosed with the rare mast cell disease. I didnt realize that meds as well as foods caused a histamine reaction. I was terribly injured many years ago and was prescribed pain meds. A dr recommended a pain pump so I wouldnt need to take oral meds. Over time the oral decreased so much & only a tiny bit from the pump was going directly to my injury. For the 1st time in 7 years I was able to walk again. However, the meds in the pump was causing my tummy to swell more & more. Little did I know it the pain meds was causing a histamine reaction!! My stomach hurt terribly and was eventually protruding. (But I was out of pain!) What do I do? Be pain free or deal with belly pain? The dr didnt believe I was having this reaction from the pain meds. The Mast cell is RARE. Finally I researched & researched and now I can show him that pain meds do cause these issues with this very rare autoimmune disease. Its all about controlling histamine levels. Now I know so much more because of people like you and others posting their stories too! Im not a crazy lady after all!! Thank you. Thank you all. May the Lord bless you and all who have these silly issues (not so silly issues!) be blessed with good health in this new year.
Thank you for posting this. It was very encouraging! ?
Hi there,
Thank you for sharing your story! I was recently diagnosed with Hashimotos and I also have histamine issues. How do you go about healing you gut without being able to take Collagen, gelatin, ect?
Removing irritating foods, adding in histamine-degrading probiotics and lowering your toxin load as well as looking into root causes to gut dysfunction can help greatly!
Hi Aleana. Thanks for a great post. I suffer from Hashi’s and histamine intolerance as well. I was wondering if you are currently treated with thyroid medication and if so T3 only or a T3/T4 combo (synthetic or NDT?). I struggle with thyroid meds (currently taking armour only) with swings from hypo to hyper. I’m hoping gut healing will eventually eliminate the AI disease. I’ve had to eliminate all oxalate containing foods from my diet eventually leading to a zero carb diet with no plant foods whatsoever, yet still have problems with grass finished meat that typically is hung to dry for too long (for me, anyway), and now can’t even take bone broth. Only meant to ask about your current thyroid status, but went a bit over that…sorry. Glad to you are doing so well!!
For those interested in the relationship between mast cells and thyroid hormone, the following may be informative:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncel.2019.00079/full
Hi I found your post very encouraging and inspiring. However, I do have a question as I would truly like to use bone broth and/or gelatin to try to heal my gut but it tends to cause anxiety and foggy brain. I was wondering how you were able to tolerate it? Also does gelatin have as much histamine as bone broth? Thank you for your help! Diane