So you’re allergic to corn.
First: Are you SURE you are allergic to corn? People often forge ahead with this as an assumption and in some cases, it might be best to question it, at least for a minute. As you will realize as you read the rest of this post, avoiding corn is not as simple as cutting a few foods from your diet. Corn is not only a food, it is a food additive, preservative, disinfectant, lubricant, emulsifier, anti-caking agent, and more. Not everyone has to avoid everything derived from corn, but for some reason more people have to avoid more derivatives than you’d ever expect.
If you’ve had an adverse reaction to a food, you should definitely avoid that food in the future. But if the food had many ingredients besides corn, it might be worth taking some time to think critically about whether the corn in the food was the problem or something else.
So before you start turning your life upside down: What gave you your diagnosis? Was it a scratch test? Those have false positives. Was it a blood test? Those don’t usually have false positives, but it could happen. Did you do a food challenge? What was the food you challenged? Any chance it was a possible allergen contaminant in the food other than corn?
Okay, so you’re SURE it’s corn that you’re allergic to. Now what?
The steps for dealing with a corn allergy are about the same no matter how severe your reactions are. But if you are having severe reactions, you need to follow sort of an accelerated schedule and get yourself out of crisis ASAP.
Symptoms of severe reactions include:
- feeling of throat closing
- rash over more than 25% of the body
- difficulty breathing
- loss of consciousness (including feelings of excessive sleepiness that you just can’t fight- getting to lay down before you pass out still counts as passing out!)
- loss of motor coordination
- extreme swelling of the eyes, lips, or anywhere else in the body
- prolonged and or painful diarrhea/intestinal cramping
- prolonged vomiting
Read more about the signs of anaphylaxis here on the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network. If you are having these kinds of reactions, you need to make drastic changes right NOW, get as corn free as possible to begin. Then maybe you can see how much you can tolerate adding in from the “corn lite” options. People with less severe reactions can sort of take their time instead of diving in head first.
Who This Guide Is For
This guide is written for people who are reacting a lot or reacting severely, because that’s the situation I just came from, but I think it can contain good advice for others.
Even if you aren’t currently in crisis, I don’t suggest that you start out by assuming that you aren’t very sensitive and don’t need to make many changes. Rather, I strongly suggest you aim for going completely corn free within 6 months, and *then* see how well you do with derivatives and traces. The reason I suggest this is that there are a number of symptoms people wouldn’t typically associate with an allergy or intolerance such as joint pain, mild GI distress, acid reflux, “random” mild rashes or itching, eye pain, fatigue, bouts of sleepiness, blood sugar highs and lows, and eczema, that can disappear with the elimination of corn, but that you wouldn’t realize are a reaction until you eliminate the offending food for a while and then reintroduce. All of these symptoms are indications of inflammation that are doing long term damage to your body, so it is in your best interest to eliminate those sources of inflammation so that you can heal.
Learn the Basics
The following article is a really good overview on the spectrum of allergies and sensitivities. Please read it right away to give yourself a good grounding in the basics before beginning your corn free journey: Inflammation – Allergies and Sensitivities on WomenToWomen.
Get Support
Join the Corn Allergy and Intolerance group on Facebook and/or Delphi Avoiding Corn forums. Preferably both, but often people like one better than another.
Stay Safe
- Figure out how to safely treat reactions.
- If you have the kind of severe reactions listed above, get a prescription for an EpiPen. If you have reactions that aren’t necessarily severe but are definitely a “true allergy” meaning hives, rashes, asthma, and other IgE symptoms, you may want to consider getting an EpiPen just in case. A bit more on “true allergies” vs intolerances. If your usual doctor won’t give you one, try the walk-in clinic. If they won’t give you one, skip directly to the “Get Your Doctor On Board” step and find someone who will write you a prescription. Learn when to use your epipen. The EpiPen 2-pak comes with a “training” pen and instructions on how to use. Read up on it before you need them and train at least one family member on how to use it as well.
- Read this emergency medicine info. Bookmark the mobile site and use the information to prepare your own ER docs.
Clean Up Your Food
Simplify your food choices. How far you go with this depends on how sick you are. If you feel relatively healthy, you may just need to start with the Corn Free Food & Product List, read through a few beginners’ links, and slowly eliminate suspect items from your pantry.
If you’re reacting a lot or you have been at it for a while and still feel ill but can’t quit figure out why, you may need to just quit eating anything with a label. Yes, this will be boring, but it won’t be forever.
Think of it this way: you need to find out what you are reacting to. If your typical dinner contains 3 or 4 different items which each have 5+ ingredients, and are then cooked in various types of oils, topped with spices and salt, on top of a bed of grains or a slice of bread, how will you know which item you are reacting to? Was it the salt, the cooking oil, an ingredient in the one of the foods? Was it the grain? How about the vegetables? All of these items *can* be corny, depending on how they were grown/packaged/processed, and additionally you can have an adverse reaction to any food at any time, even if you tested negative on an allergy test for it. So while you are still getting a baseline, you need to eat very few foods, prepared very simply.
Start with a list of 20 or fewer single, whole foods you think are completely safe for you. Stay away from anything in a package other than salt and cooking oil.
Searching for Paleo Recipe blogs, or searching Pinterest for Paleo recipes can provide some inspiration for meals.
Question everything. Actually, even be suspicious of your salt and cooking oil. I have had some MAJOR olive oil fails and actually still don’t have a safe olive oil or even a safe cooking oil at all other than the fat I render from my safe chickens and beef. Ask on the forum or Facebook group what is working for others BUT DON’T ASSUME THOSE WILL WORK FOR YOU. If you find you are reacting to everything you eat, that’s a good sign that your problem is what you’re cooking it in. Either spices, cooking oil, or pan. (Cast iron and pitted teflon can really hang on to allergens previously cooked in them.) Consider braising or boiling your food for a time to eliminate even that factor. Boring, yeah, but safety first. Skip other spices for now until you have a clearer picture of what is safe for you.
Get a feel for what “clean food” looks like. When choosing foods, stay away from items that are commonly waxed such as apples, oranges, cucumbers, and anything else that looks shiny to you, and stay away from items such as potatoes and sweet potatoes that you aren’t sure sprout, as they may have been treated with something corny to keep them from sprouting. There are more ways for whole foods to be corny than wax, so if you observe that you react, do some research using the links I’ve provided into how the item could be corny. It *could* be a new food allergy, but it’s corn so often that it’s important to look into it before taking that food item out of your diet forever.
Keep eliminating and switching foods until you are reaction-free. For the *extremely* reactive folks, sometimes this list of 20 or fewer safe foods will be more like 5. Or even 2. I’m not sure, but I think this happens most often when folks are both very sensitive and multiply allergic and/or have other autoimmune issues going on. And when you get down to that kind of sensitivity and autoimmune disaster, *which* foods are safe seems to vary drastically between people as well. For me it was eggs and pears. I doubt this would work for ANYONE else, as the eggs were corn fed and the pears are a common oral allergy syndrome trigger for people. But that’s what it came down to for me as far as what I could tolerate without my throat closing up. I now have far more foods than those two items, but I had to just give my body a rest for a while and get a baseline before I could start building back up.
As I mentioned in the beginning of this post, if you aren’t highly reactive, you have some leeway to go about this elimination at your own pace. But if it were me, I wouldn’t put it off for too long. The lengthy explanation of why is a topic for another post. Just trust me that you probably aren’t doing yourself any favors by delaying healing.
Keep a Food Journal
This is crucial- even with a simplified list of foods, often the only way to see patterns in reactions is by looking back over what you ate for several days or a week or more. There are lots of ways to do this, and you’ll have to find what works for you. Maybe it’s a Google Doc you have linked in your bookmarks bar. Maybe it’s a tiny notebook in your pocket. Maybe it’s a doc on your phone that you add to. Maybe it’s you taking a picture of every meal and Instagramming it with comments. Doesn’t matter, just do it. Write down what you ate including ingredients, and the time, and how you were feeling. Then also make sure to log any reactions or weird occurrences and the time, even if they were well away from a meal time.
Some great advice on how to keep a food journal on News for Corn Avoiders.
Find Local Resources
Included in the “Files” section of the Facebook group is a list of approved regional corn allergy groups. These groups are moderated by knowledgeable members of the group and are intended as a place to share local resources that wouldn’t be useful to anyone who doesn’t live in the area, and will be a good place for you to ask questions like, “Where the heck can I get eggs from chickens that aren’t fed corn?” or to share information like, “The popcorn cart near the Pacific Science Center emits such a pungent and far-reaching corn aroma that I had an asthma attack and almost passed out when 50 feet away from it.”
To find safer vegetables than what you may be able to access in the grocery store, check localharvest.org for local farmers’ markets or CSAs. Note that organic does NOT mean corn free. You will need to ask some questions of the folks growing the veggies you buy. Genelle has a good starting list of questions here. If you are buying from a farmers’ market booth instead of direct from the farm you will also want to know what the veggies were transported over in and whether they shared storage or truck bed with corn. I honestly won’t even buy from farms who grow corn because the chance for cross contamination is too much and I’m so reactive. But I have lots of choices for no-spray farms, so I can do that. Others may not be so lucky.
Concerned about cost? If you have SNAP/EBT benefits, there are many farmer’s markets that accept EBT cards. Here is a list of Farmer’s Markets that accept them. (This is the official Food and Nutrition Service document, and is a Microsoft Word document. If you don’t have Word, I will try to keep this Google Doc version updated.)
For meat, dairy, and egg resources, check eatwild.com for farms in your area that might sell stuff that is safe for you. But keep in mind that meat can be kind of an advanced topic for the highly sensitive, so you may wish to just avoid animal products for a time while you get the rest of your diet figured out. But hey, you may not need to go the whole 9 yards with custom meat processing. Maybe all you need to do is start going to a real butcher instead of getting meat from the grocery store that has been treated with corny food dyes to keep it looking fresh and then triple-rinsed in corny disinfectants.
Get accustomed to the idea of local, seasonal eating. For the very sensitive, the only way to get safe food is to be able to confirm with the person that grew it that nothing was ever sprayed on it (even organic pesticides and antifungals are in corn-based solvents) and that the foods weren’t stored, transported, or packaged with something that contaminates them. Even if grocery store produce works fine for you right now, it’s good to find out ahead of time what local resources you have. Use the sites above to find out what’s available to you. Get hooked up with community supported agriculture programs, and find farmers’ markets. Show up, talk to some folks, get a feel for it. Become a part of the community. It’s rewarding in and of itself and will pay off later if you ever end up in a situation where you are having trouble sourcing safe food.
Cut Down on Trace Exposure
- Medication: Figure out the rest of your medication, especially daily stuff. Use the corn allergens list to compare to the inactive ingredients in your medications. Sometimes it’s a little hard to find out the inactive ingredients of prescription meds, so I have a little write up of how to do that here. You may need to have some of your meds custom-made for you with ingredients you tolerate. There are pharmacies called compounding pharmacies that can do this for you. Some advice on how to get medication compounded safely and successfully here.
- Water: Yeah, really. People react to water. I do. Filtration systems can introduce corn traces, chemicals can be added to buffer the PH that are corn based, corn based disinfectants can be used, and water bottles can be made out of corn plastic. The Berkey water filtration systems with ceramic filters and fluoride filters are safe for the very sensitive. I react to them, but think that is for a non-corn reason. Before you invest in an expensive filtration system though, first just try some bottled waters and see how you do. Ask around on the forums/FB group to see what people are using. Crystal Geyser works for most folks.
- Cookware: Do you have cast iron? It’s probably holding old allergens in. How about pitted teflon? Total allergen magnet. Maybe buy just one new stainless, glass, or enamel-coated pan right now and make sure it always says pristinely allergen free. Make sure it’s something that can be completely cleaned of any allergens.
- Body products, laundry detergent, and dish soap:: Some people are skin reactive. In fact, some people are *more* skin reactive than they are food reactive! But even if you only react to ingested corn, you will find that you ingest way more of your personal care products than you’d ever realized. Use the corn allergens list to check ingredients, reccomendations from the group or forum, and the Corn Free Food & Products List as a reference for some things to try.
Get Your Doctor On Board
Or find a doctor who will get on board. People tend to want to go to an allergist/immunologist right away. I think going to a specialist can be a great plan, but you have to find the RIGHT specialist, and the good ones are often booked up. You need someone to be a primary care/home base for you right NOW. So go with your current primary doc if you can get them on board to understand your allergy, or find a new one if you can’t. You need someone who will listen to you and believe you about your own body, who will not try to encourage you to eat corn derivatives because “all the protein has been processed out”, who will not try to get you to take medication that has just “a little bit” of corn in it, and who will write you compounding prescriptions.
I’ve gone to see several new doctors in the last year, and I think I’ve finally got my process streamlined. I typed up the following documents to bring along:
- A one-to-two-page bullet-point list detailing my health history. It focuses almost exclusively on my allergy history at this time, stretching back to childhood, but includes major health events like scarlet fever and a tonsilectomy.
- Pictures of my more dramatic reactions.
- A bullet-point list of current medications and supplements, including dosage and frequency.
- My current safe food list.
- A bullet-point list of health goals.
- My ER Safety protocol
- A copy of the corn allergens list.
Instead of attempting to go over these documents with the doctor in the appointment, I hand them to the receptionist before I go in. If the doc is worth anything, they will read it before they come in and come in with focused questions. If they don’t walk in compassionate and prepared, you should probably just leave and find a new doctor.
Become an Expert on Hidden Corn
Start figuring out about where corn hides. It’s overwhelming, but you NEED to become an expert to remain safe.
- New To Corn Allergy on Corn Free Lifestyle
- Corn Allergens List
- Where’s the Corn in Foods?
With that last link, I don’t suggest reading the whole thing end to end. You’ll end up hiding under the bed with a tinfoil hat on. Just search it when you are wondering, “How could there be corn in this item?” Get your information in manageable chunks.
Get Your Workplace on Board.
It’s important to proceed carefully here and not ask for accommodations until you’re sure you know what you need. If you do not know that you are airborne reactive, don’t go insisting on a corn-free floor at your work until you do know. On the other hand you need to make sure that you stay safe, so this can be a difficult line to walk. Another thing that I don’t really have the answer for is that sensitivity levels and reactivity changes. Things that are okay when you ask for accommodations may change, and it’s hard to say what effect it will have changing the requests when you’ve already gotten people used to one way of doing things. Again, it’s very hard to walk the line between your safety and what is a “reasonable accommodation.” Maybe just start with, “I have this allergy. I know I have dangerous reactions. I do not yet know exactly what accommodations I will need, but for right now I need this short list of things.”
Don’t Panic
So there’s your to do list. It’s a lot. But just take it one thing at a time. You CAN do this. Get support through the groups and your loved ones and remember to breathe.
Don’t Stock Up Right Away
It’s easy to want to buy things in bulk to save money and to feel secure that you will have enough to eat, but at least in the beginning stages, try to buy only as much as you need and only replace things as you need to. This allergy is expensive and that money adds up. Additionally, your tolerances will shift and you may end up with a case worth of something that you react to.
Instead of buying an entire set of new pans because your old ones are corned, consider buying just one good pot and one good pan and using those for a bit. Instead of buying an entire case of canned beans you think you are fine with, buy just a couple at a time until you know you are doing very very well with them. On the other hand, if it is a seasonal item like fresh, unsprayed, unwaxed apples or organic peaches, get just enough to trial, then if you tolerate buy a huge quantity and preserve in the freezer or by canning.
Choose your battles and spend your money wisely.
Keep Thinking Critically
This is just good life advice, honestly. But it’s especially good life advice if you are doing all of the above and are still sick. You may be overlooking something or taking something for granted, or you may even be on the wrong track entirely.
Unfortunately I see a pattern with highly reactive folks, myself included, where they get sicker and sicker and lose almost all of their foods, before they finally figure out the ONE thing that is getting them. And sometimes it is a lot of stages of finding The Thing and eliminating it, and finding something else was still bugging you.
And sometimes it’s more than corn, or in some cases it wasn’t corn at all. I have totally seen some people become extremely sick on top of being allergic to corn, or are actually just be sick and not even allergic to corn in the first place, but their reactions are so weird that they think it’s food when it isn’t really. It happens. I don’t EVER want to question someone’s expertise on their own body and reactions, because having it done to me has been very hurtful. I’m just saying that lots of things are possible, and you may have more or different problems than you initially thought.
Just keep your eyes open, get support from other allergy people, and as much as possible journal and write down EVERYTHING to help you think critically about what is going on.
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