Nutrition and Eggs
Allergic reaction to eggs
allergic reaction to eggs
Some foods are more liable than others to provoke allergic reactions in susceptible people because of the kind of proteins they contain. The size of the protein molecule can be important and some proteins are more digestible, absorbable and stable than others.
Eggs contain proteins that, in the raw state, are of the right size and stability to cause allergies, but in most cases these proteins cannot withstand the effect of heat. This explains why people with a mild allergy to eggs can tolerate some cooked foods, such as cake, even when they contain relatively large quantities of egg.
In Europe and elsewhere a significant proportion of the population report adverse reactions to food which they regard as 'allergy' but generally few of these percieved reactions are true IgE-mediated reactions. A recent analysis of the prevalence of sensitisation to 24 foods among a random sample of over 4500 young adults in 13 countries found overall rates to be highly variable across different countries, although sensitisation rates to specific foods were similar in all countries. Sensitisation rates to egg were generally low at an average of 0.2% in the overall sample population; the figure for the UK was 0.5%.*
*Burney P, Summers C, Chinn S, Hooper R, van Ree R, Lidholm J, (2010) Prevalence and distribution of sensitization to foods in the European Community Respiratory Health Survey: a EuroPrevall analysis, Allergy 2010; 65, 1182-1188