Fibre May Be the Missing Key to Reduce Your Hay Fever Symptoms

Posted January 2022
2022-02
Lentils, green beans, celery, cherry tomato, parsley + olive oil & lemon dressing on Corn Thins slices

Do you suffer from fay fever? You may think that popping an Antihistamine is all you can do to reduce the suffering but there may be another way to help reduce your allergies and hay fever and this is your diet.

Western diets which are commonly low in dietary fibre which are non-digestible carbohydrates which resist digestion until they reach your large intestine where they are the food for the good bacteria in your gut. When the good bacteria eat the dietary fibre they produce anti-inflammatory messages or postbiotics such as short chain fatty acids and other metabolite. These postbiotics send messages to your body which reduces the inflammatory state of your body and consequently reduces your risk of developing hay fever.

A type of call called a Mast cell plays a central role in initiating an inflammatory state in your body from an allergen such as freshly cut grass or cat hair. When the Mast cell senses your allergy trigger it releases histamine which causes a cascade of effects which you would be aware of as a hay fever sufferer.

Research suggests that dietary fibre may inhibit the release of histamine from the Mast cell. With the effectiveness of this inhibition increased with more dietary fibre consumed. One short chain fatty acid produced called butyrate may stop the Mast cell from activating.

Adults need between 25-38g of dietary fibre each day. The best way to include dietary fibre is through plant foods like whole grain, or whole grain containing foods like Corn Thins slices, nuts, seeds, legumes, vegetables, and fruit. To provide your gut with the variety of dietary fibre it needs for health aim for at least 30 different plant foods each week.

Take home message: No one enjoys a runny nose or itchy eyes. Take action against the uncomfortable symptoms of hay fever by including enough dietary fibre each day.

 

Reference:

Folkerts J, Stadhouders R, Redegeld FA, et al. Effect of Dietary Fiber and Metabolites on Mast Cell Activation and Mast Cell-Associated Diseases. Front Immunol. 2018;9:1067. Published 2018 May 29. doi:10.3389/fimmu.2018.01067

 

Ashleigh Felth…
Accredited Practising Dietitian
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