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Do apples ever make you cough?


Pan

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I just ate an apple a few minutes ago. Bad idea, as I'm still a bit prone to coughing, though finally mostly recovered from a flu. I find that apples seem to encourage coughing, and I don't mean from particles of food going down the windpipe. I forget this and eat them anyway because I like them, but it's disturbing me. Does this happen to any of you? Any insight into what in ripe organic apples might be irritating my throat?

Edited by Pan (log)

Michael aka "Pan"

 

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Maybe. It's something I hadn't noticed until fairly recently (a matter of months or a couple of years; I can't remember exactly how long). Sucks if I've gotten allergic to yet another thing. It's only with raw apples, though. No problem with hard cider or pastries made with apples.

Michael aka "Pan"

 

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You will probably consider this as coming from left field, but with you recovering from the flu; been there, done that, burned the t-shirt- do you maybe reckon it might be a sensitivity to the ethylene, like what we were talking about with bananas? I mean, like, it is a gas? And perhaps the flu has made you more noticably affected?

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I found this from a health website:

There are types of food allergies called silent or settle food sensitivities where the patient would only have a reaction to them only if eaten in large quantities, with certain other foods, during certain times of the year, or when the immune system is stimulated (example, during a virus infection) or after an allergic reaction to a drug. A special form of food allergy has only recently been discovered. This is due to cross-reactivity between certain food proteins and certain pollen proteins which at the surface seem to have nothing to do With each other, but at the level of your immune system they may took the same or very similar. For example, some patients who are allergic to certain tree or weed pollens, may develop an allergic reaction to eating watermelon or apples, during the time of the year when the pollen count is high and/or their allergies are out of control. This is because your immune system "sees" certain protein elements in the watermelon or apple, as the same or very similar (cross-reactive) to the protein contained in the tree or weed pollen, which you are already allergic to. Similarly there are cross-reacting proteins among a specific type of synthetic rubber (latex) and several fruits including banana and avocado.

(http://www.doctorelite.com/health/health7.html)

amanda

Googlista

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What happens if you eat an apple with the peel removed? Do you still get the urge to cough?

"Some people see a sheet of seaweed and want to be wrapped in it. I want to see it around a piece of fish."-- William Grimes

"People are bastard-coated bastards, with bastard filling." - Dr. Cox on Scrubs

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It's good to see this info, and other people's experiences! For me it started with sugar melons of any sort: quite strong swelling of the soft palate and pharynx, with itching. It progressed to raw carrot, tomato, avocado, banana, certain types of apple, nectarine, mandarin, cherry, hazelnut... that covers most of them. Only in their raw state, and when eaten alone. Even very mild heat treatment is sufficient to prevent a reaction from occurring, which is great! Un-heated, I react probably 60-70% of the time.

-- lamington a.k.a. Duncan Markham

The Gastronomer's Bookshelf - collaborative book reviews about all things food and wine

Syrup & Tang - candid commentary and flavourful fancies

"It's healthy. It's cake. It's chocolate cake."

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lamington, I don't reckon I'll be running into you at a raw restaurant, right?

lol, indeed not... though maybe a mix-n-match would dilute things! I've broken a record this week and eaten five whole raw carrots without a hint of an itch. Rare event.

-- lamington a.k.a. Duncan Markham

The Gastronomer's Bookshelf - collaborative book reviews about all things food and wine

Syrup & Tang - candid commentary and flavourful fancies

"It's healthy. It's cake. It's chocolate cake."

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Oh, my, this will sound vey superficial, but when I was hospitalized, I was restricted really severely on my diet, so of course what did I crave...bingo, exactly what I could not have. Not having the ability to eat a food in it's raw state is spooky, to say the least. We are taught from the get go that raw, natural foods are healthy, but that does not always hold true. There are quite a few highly respected researchers who report that not only is raw foods a bad idea, they are actually worse than a state of bulimic behavior...

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I often have a mild hayfever-like reaction to raw apples: a little sneezing, maybe itchy eyes. Never with cooked, never with peeled. I wouldn't be surprised if it's a reaction to whatever the apples are treated with. I have the reaction to organic apples as well, but as I'm sure everybody is aware organic apples are treated with pesticides and fungicides and such -- it's just that the chemicals applied are organic.

Steven A. Shaw aka "Fat Guy"
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)

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I wasn't aware of that, in fact.

It would be interesting to know what chemicals organic farmers use on their crops.

Well, I know the two most commonly used pesticides in the US are both organic: oil (an insecticide) and sufur (a fungicide). A good place to do some reading, bearing in mind that this group is staunchly pro-organic, is the OTA (Organic Trade Association) Web site. From their summary of the legislation covering organic farming:

Do organic farmers use any pesticides or pest control products?

Yes. Sometimes, organic farmers find that they need to use pest control products as part of an ecological farm plan. However, they may only use products included as "acceptable" in the National List.

More here

This might make an interesting, separate thread so if anybody wants to pursue the discussion please do start one.

Steven A. Shaw aka "Fat Guy"
Co-founder, Society for Culinary Arts & Letters, sshaw@egstaff.org
Proud signatory to the eG Ethics code
Director, New Media Studies, International Culinary Center (take my food-blogging course)

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I'm somewhat surprised that so many of you are blaming the pesticides in use on apples and other fruits and vegetables for something that acts like an allergic reaction.

Keep in mind that plants also have defense systems. A lot of these defense systems have stimulating animals immune systems as their core.

Most pesticides are much to small molecularly to stimulate an immune response. The products in the body that stimulate your immune system are sized on the order of proteins. Very very large molecules (depending on your scale as a chemist). A single pyrethrin molecule is really quite dwarfed in comparison.

However, the apple, avocado, what-have-you, is from living material and does have large proteins that can cause immune response. Especially if you have a route to blood or tissue, such as an open sore in your mouth. Also, hypersensitivity does happen.

So, when I finish medical school, and people come to me with issues like this, I will (and do even now) classify them as an allergic reaction and caution people to either monitor the reaction or avoid the food.

An apple isn't worth dying for, but a life without apples is certainly a lower quality of life.

I always attempt to have the ratio of my intelligence to weight ratio be greater than one. But, I am from the midwest. I am sure you can now understand my life's conundrum.

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