Food Sensitivities and Psychological Disturbance: a Review
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Nutrition and Health
- Vol. 6 (3), 135-146
- https://doi.org/10.1177/026010608900600303
Abstract
The literature dealing with the relationship between food sensitivities and psychological disturbance is reviewed. Numerous theorists and researchers believe the problems of persons presenting with adverse reactions to foods are psychological when immunological techniques fail to confirm an allergic basis. However, there is mounting evidence that adverse reactions to foods can most likely be caused by a variety of mechanisms, and that food sensitivities may indeed cause or exacerbate symptoms of a psychological nature.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serendipity and Food Sensitivity: A Case StudyHeadache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain, 1987
- Adverse reactions to foods: Relevance to psychiatric disordersJournal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1986
- Pseudo food allergy.BMJ, 1986
- Environmental IllnessArchives of Internal Medicine, 1986
- ‘Pseudo-allergy’: Treatment with an MAO inhibitorPsychosomatics, 1985
- Are confusion and controversy about food hypersensitivity really necessary?Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1985
- A Psychiatric Study of Patients with Supposed Food AllergyThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1984
- ‘Allergic to everything’: A medical subculturePsychosomatics, 1983
- FOOD ALLERGYThe Lancet, 1983
- FOOD ALLERGY: HOW MUCH IN THE MIND? A Clinical and Psychiatric Study of Suspected Food HypersensitivityThe Lancet, 1983