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. 2007 Jul 7;13(25):3456–3465. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v13.i25.3456

Table 1.

Psychological aspects of adverse reactions to food

Author Subjects Examinations Adverse reaction to food Results
Pearson et al, 1983 8 males, 12 females; allergy clinic Psychiatric clinical interview schedule Double blind placebo controlled food-challenge Hypersensitivity was confirmed in 4 subjects No psychological symptoms in subjects hypersensitivity was confirmed, high incidence of psychiatric disorder (neurotic depression, hysterical disorders) in subjects whose belief that they had a food allergy could not be confirmed
Rix et al,1984 23 patients; allergy clinic Psychiatric clinical intervie schedule Double blind placebo controlled food-challenge Hypersensitivity was confirmed in 4 subjects No evidence of psychiatric disorder in subjects hypersensitivity was confirmed, high incidence of psychiatric disorder (identical with a group of psychiatric out patient referrals) in patients whose belief that they had a food allergy could not be confirmed
Bell et al,1993 490 young college students Self-reported illness from several common foods and chemicals Indefinite diagnosis Correlation between perceived food intolerance and depression, anxiety, and somatization
Vatn et al,1995 17 patients with food intolerance 34 healthy referents Prospective placebo-controlled study General Health Questionnaire Double blind placebo controlled food-challenge Non IgE-mediated food intolerance 13 of 17 patients reported major distress or trauma during childhood, including loss of parents and violence or major psychiatric illness. Psychological problems are frequent
Peveler et al,1996 Community study in 273 adults Blind food challenge test Clinical interview Several questionnaires Brief symptom inventory Intolerance to test foods Subjects that were judged not to be allergic on clinical grounds did not manifest significant mood disturbance or impaired social adjustment or other psychological symptoms
Knibb et al,1999 Random mailing recruited 955 participants, of whom 232 perceived them-selves to be food intolerant General Health Questionnaire-28 (GHQ-28) Eysenck Personality Questionnaire Selfperception of food intolerance It is concluded that perceived food intolerance is associated with psychological distress in women, and neurotic symptoms in both men and women, but there is no greater prevalence of psychiatric disorder among women or men
Lind et al,2005 46 patients with food hypersensitivity 50 health car workers 70 volunteers Subjective Health Complaints Inventory and Modern Health Worries Scale Subjective food hypersensitivity No IgE-mediated allergy Subjects with subjective food hypersensitivity reported more subjective health complaints and more worries An association between subjective food hypersensitivity and subjective health complaints was supposed