For the past six years I have been extremely aware that food directly impacts my eye discomfort. Not only did my eyes feel awful when I drank wine and ate cheese, but the rest of me felt pretty bad too. I was dizzy, had heart palpitations, massive headaches, upset stomaches, anaphylactic skin reactions, and this year, hives from inhaling just about every known detergent and cleaner, scented or not. I've had allergy tests, skin tests, and blood tests until there wasn't much blood left to take. No allergies, nothing. Then I discovered that there are several Facebook pages dealing with histamine intolerance, and so I joined them and found that there are literally thousands of us suffering from the same symptoms. I whittled my diet down to what I thought was a histamine friendly array, but things still were not quite right. Finally, I discovered that for some of us, every bit of histamine consumed has a cumulative affect. The smallest added overload can mean a huge difference, not only to my general health, but also my eyes. I've been on a low histamine diet now for about a month, and must say that my eyes feel 75% better than they have at any point in the past six years. When I overload on histamine, the oil in my meibomian glands solidifies, and my eyes feel like there are rocks in them. Since I started carefully watching histamine levels, the oil quality in my eyes has greatly improved, and become much more viscous. Also, my eyes are not as dry and there are actually times when I do not need goggles. Tonight is one of those times. (A goggle-free evening!) I was delighted to see that for the first time in a long while my lipid panel showed that all of my cholesterol levels were normal. I am not a scientist, but for some reason my body does not process histamine correctly and there is a direct correlation between this and the lipid quality in my system. Histamine is certainly not the answer for everyone with dry eye, but if you are having some of the same type of problems, perhaps this post will help. I hope so.
http://www.diagnosisdiet.com/histami...rance-science/
http://www.diagnosisdiet.com/histami...rance-science/
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