Could it be the higher levels of iodine?
Contrast CT scans can get really exciting when the patient turns out to have an iodine allergy...
Could it be the higher levels of iodine?
Contrast CT scans can get really exciting when the patient turns out to have an iodine allergy...
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Oh yea, I have that allergy.
I ate shellfish all of my life until, at age 35, we were on a vacation here, on Cape Cod, searching for a house in the Boston area, preparing for our move from AZ. I ate a lobster roll and within 10 minutes was having a serious reaction, lips tingling, etc. I took my allergy meds and inhaler and never touched shellfish again. This was at the time I was having a lot of asthma/allergy issues. For awhile, I couldn't drink wine, either (sulfites). I can eat scallops, though.
Three years ago, when I was going through all of those medical tests, I had an abdominal CT scan. Within 10 seconds of the dye being injected, my right eye swelled shut and I had the hive the size of an egg on my wrist. Although I had no issues breathing, etc. I totally freaked out, so they shot me up with Benedryl and epinephrine and DH had to come get me at the ER. I kept telling them I didn't want the dye, as my mom had an iodine allergy. But no, they insisted.
I hope I never need stress test where they need to see your arteries, or any of the other things my DH has had.
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I don't believe that sea salt has iodine. It is to added in commercial salt, but does not occur naturally in sea salt.
Could it be MSG? I'd be surprised if Newman's and Amy's had MSG, but with all the huge company buy-outs, it would not surprise me if those companies have been bought be a larger company that did not stay true to the founders' philosphy of healthy food.
Stay away from shellfish. I get slight tingling in my fingers and lips, but that's enough to keep me away.
Iodine does occur naturally in sea salt.
It does not occur in NaCl commercial salt, which is why it is added during manufacture.
Man-made table salt has standardized amounts of iodine. Sea salt iodine occurs in varying amounts.
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
Thanks for the clarification. It's no wonder that I nearly flunked chemistry in high school! My container of California Sea Salt states, "This salt does not supply iodide, a necessary nutrient." I guess iodide and iodine are different, huh?
NYB, I hope you figure out what's going on so you can avoid those reactions. They sound quite uncomfortable.
You can hardly be allergic to two elements that are absolutely essential to basically all body functions.
Maybe something IN sea salt, but not the Na or the Cl.
rabbit - whose alpine origins may have something to do with an increasing intolerance to invertebrates. The last crab had its revenge on me.
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That makes sense to me.
Once when I was waitressing i had a woman customer who told me they were 'deathly allergic to salt' and they couldn't have anything on the menu with salt in it. i told her that pretty much eliminated everything except a salad with plain olive oil on it and herbs. She then asked about the chicken soup, and I said I was sure it had salt in it, though not overly huge amounts. She ordered it anyway, saying 'a little salt would be ok'.![]()
I got that kind of thing regularly while waitressing. I'm not saying some people aren't seriously and genuinely allergic to some things. But I too wonder how one can be allergic to a mineral or nutrient that we need in our bodies to survive? Like Alpinerabbit, I too would first suspect other ingredients like preservatives, dyes, texturizers, additives, etc.
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Naw, they're pretty much the same thing. But since sea salt from that patch of California salt flat may not have the minimal required amount needed for proper thyroid function, they have to label it as being deficient. Salt from another patch of salt flat or from one salt mine or another may have the minimal amount, or may have much more than the minimal amount.
Goiter hardly ever showed up in sea-shore cultures, so a lifetime of eating from the sea does supply enough iodine. But if all a person gets is sea salt (and not sea food) they may not get enough. Or, if they happen to be lucky enough to get sea salt with a lot of natural iodine they may get plenty.
I read a really interesting book about early 1900's inland China, and the rampant goiter in the population. Meanwhile, up in the Himalaya there was less goiter because of the access to salt from the Himalayan salt deposits (and fossilized sea creatures, way up high in the mountains! its a very cool area geologically.)
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson