
What’s Causing Your Food Sensitivities?
If you feel like your body is suddenly reacting to more and more foods, you’re not alone. Maybe you could eat dairy, eggs, or gluten without issue before, but now even a small bite triggers bloating, fatigue, rashes, or brain fog. It can be confusing and frustrating. You might even start to wonder: “Am I allergic to everything?”
What Is Leaky Gut?
How the Immune System Gets Overwhelmed
Why More Foods? Why Now?
So why does it feel like you're reacting to more foods than ever?
Accumulated Stress on the Gut: Over time, things like antibiotics, processed foods, alcohol, chronic stress, and even medications can wear down your gut lining.
Cross-Reactivity: Sometimes your immune system thinks different foods are similar and starts reacting to those, too. For example, if you react to gluten, you might also start reacting to oats or dairy due to similar protein structures.
Poor Gut Health: Imbalanced gut bacteria (called dysbiosis) can increase inflammation and weaken the gut lining.
Mast Cell Activation: Certain cells in your body that release histamine can become overly sensitive, making you react to foods, smells, and even temperature changes.
Too Many Toxins: Environmental toxins, mold, and heavy metals can burden your immune system, making it more reactive.
Signs That Leaky Gut and Immune Overload Might Be a Problem
●You react to foods you used to tolerate
●You feel better with a limited diet, but worse when you try new foods
●You have digestive symptoms (bloating, gas, diarrhea, or constipation)
●You struggle with fatigue, brain fog, skin issues, or joint pain
●You have been diagnosed with autoimmune conditions
●You feel worse after periods of stress or illness
Functional Testing: Understanding What Your Body Needs
1. Comprehensive Stool Analysis
2. Food Sensitivity Testing
3. Intestinal Permeability Testing
4. Micronutrient Testing
5. Inflammatory and Immune Panels
Healing the Gut and Calming the Immune System
1. Remove Irritants
2. Focus on Gut-Healing Foods
Support your gut lining with foods like:
●Cooked squashes and sweet potatoes
●Fermented foods (if tolerated)
●Herbal teas like chamomile or ginger
3. Rebuild with Nutrients
●Zinc
These can help repair the gut lining, balance your microbiome, and reduce inflammation.
4. Lower Your Total Stress Load
Stress isn’t just mental, it affects your gut and immune system too. Consider:
●Gentle movement like yoga or walking
