Thanks for the information about when to take antihistamines! It's very helpful.
This bears further research. I see that there is already an emerging body of scientific research about the potential relationships of histamine and inflammatory bowel diseases, food allergies, and gluten, such as this paper:
http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/85/5/1185.full. Excerpt:
"Recently, a potential genetic background of a reduced histamine metabolism has also been investigated. The human DAO gene spans ≈10 kbp and is located on chromosome 7q35 (27) Various single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the DAO gene have been shown to be associated with inflammatory and neoplastic gastrointestinal diseases, such as food allergy (44), gluten-sensitive enteropathy, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and colon adenoma (45-47). "
"Besides headache, gastrointestinal ailments including diffuse stomach ache, colic, flatulence, and diarrhea are leading symptoms of histamine intolerance. Elevated histamine concentrations and diminished DAO activities have been shown for various inflammatory and neoplastic diseases such as Crohn's disease (17), ulcerative colitis (67), allergic enteropathy (39), food allergy (33, 68, 69), and colorectal neoplasmas (24). In the colonic mucosa of patients with food allergy, a concomitant reduced HNMT (70) and an impaired total histamine degradation capacity (THDC) (69) have been found (33), so that the enzymes cannot compensate each other. Therefore, an impaired histamine metabolism has been suggested to play a role in the pathogenesis of these diseases."
Of course it's very rare that they actually investigate MC, but food allergies and gluten and inflammation point to linkages.
Tex, you put together a bunch of helpful information about histamine a few months ago. Would it be easy to post a link to that information. I looked through my email, but did not come across it.
--T