Histamine Health Coach

Episode 33 - Latex: The Hidden Trigger (With an Added Ingredient)

9 min · 24. apr. 2026
episode Episode 33 - Latex: The Hidden Trigger (With an Added Ingredient) cover

Description

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2518343/fan_mail/new] A “simple” bandage shouldn’t leave your skin looking and feeling burned for days, yet that’s exactly what can happen when latex enters the picture and your histamine threshold is already low. We’re unpacking the sneaky role of hidden latex exposure in histamine intolerance, MCAS, and mast cell flares, especially when reactions feel random or out of proportion. If you’ve ever thought, “Why is my body doing this?” this conversation offers a missing piece that can finally make the pattern click. I share my personal experiences with latex burns from bandages, immediate stinging from a cosmetic sponge, and welts triggered by workout clothes where sweat and friction turn an elastic waistband into a problem. We break down the difference between Type 1 IgE latex allergy and Type 4 delayed contact sensitivity, plus why heat, moisture, and skin irritation can amplify symptoms when your system is already primed for a histamine storm. We also talk about a topic many people don’t connect to latex at all: condoms. If you’ve had burning, itching, or pain after sex, natural rubber latex may be worth considering, and there are latex-free alternatives like polyisoprene options (including SKYN). Then we get practical with everyday steps: requesting latex-free supplies at the dentist and doctor, choosing safer bandages, rethinking makeup tools, and making smarter clothing choices to reduce triggers. If this helps you see your symptoms differently, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who needs answers, and leave a review so more women can find real support for histamine intolerance and MCAS. What’s one “random” reaction you’re ready to investigate? Here's the link to Histamine, Latex, and Food - What's the connection?https://histaminehealthcoach.com/articles-%26-episodes/f/histamine-latex-and-food%E2%80%94what%E2%80%99s-the-connection [https://histaminehealthcoach.com/articles-%26-episodes/f/histamine-latex-and-food%E2%80%94what%E2%80%99s-the-connection] I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you. Follow me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/histaminehealthcoach?igsh=MXBudWJpanBzaWg2MA%3D%3D&utm_source=qr] Follow me on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094863274206] Email: teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com [teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com] Website: https://histaminehealthcoach.com [https://histaminehealthcoach.com]

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36 episodes

episode Episode 36 - Support That Lowers Histamine Stress artwork

Episode 36 - Support That Lowers Histamine Stress

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2518343/fan_mail/new] The hardest part of histamine intolerance is not always the food. It’s the moment someone invites you to dinner and your brain starts racing: Will there be anything I can eat? Will I react right away or pay for it tomorrow? Will I look “difficult” for asking questions? That stress is real, and it can shrink your world fast. Today I focus on the lifestyle factor that gets overlooked in most histamine conversations: support through relationships. We dig into what support actually means (hint: it’s not perfection and it’s not everyone eating a low histamine diet with you). I share simple, doable examples like bringing a safe protein to a family gathering, checking a restaurant menu ahead of time, and being included in planning so you have time to prepare. We also talk about why people often don’t “get it,” including the unpredictability of the histamine bucket, and how clear information helps loved ones show up better. If you’ve been stuck between protecting your body and wanting your life back, this is for you. I end with one question that can reshape your healing journey: who is on your team, and what would it look like to ask for help? If this resonates, email me and tell me what support you have or what you wish you had, and grab my free Low Histamine Diet Starter Plan at histaminehealthcoach.com. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs this, and leave a review so more women can find support too. I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you. Follow me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/histaminehealthcoach?igsh=MXBudWJpanBzaWg2MA%3D%3D&utm_source=qr] Follow me on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094863274206] Email: teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com [teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com] Website: https://histaminehealthcoach.com [https://histaminehealthcoach.com]

4. juni 20268 min
episode Episode 35 - How To Exercise With Histamine Intolerance Without Flaring artwork

Episode 35 - How To Exercise With Histamine Intolerance Without Flaring

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2518343/fan_mail/new] Movement can feel like a trap when you live with histamine intolerance: do too much and you risk flushing, itching, dizziness, headaches, GI symptoms, a racing heart, or a brutal two-day crash. Do too little and your body gets stiffer, sleep gets worse, stress climbs, and you start doubting what you can handle. I’m Teresa Christensen, a functional medicine certified health coach, and I’m sharing a gentler way to think about exercise when your system feels unpredictable. We start by naming what many women carry quietly: fear. For some, exercise-induced anaphylaxis is real, and past reactions can make even a simple walk feel unsafe. I talk about why the nervous system matters as much as the workout, and how “supportive movement” often lives in the middle ground between pushing harder and avoiding everything. You’ll hear why walking is my go-to, how cold and ice can change the entire experience, and the practical ways I adapt around outdoor triggers like flowering plants, pollen, and even what gets stirred up when lawns are cut. We also get specific about temperature regulation and cooling down, including why cold plunges, cold showers, or even ice water after exercise can backfire for sensitive bodies. Then we dig into strength training for women as we age, what to look for in a trainer, and why recovery is often the true limiting factor with histamine symptoms. I also share my take on vibration plates as a tool that can either feel grounding or overstimulating depending on the person. If this helps, subscribe, share with a friend who’s struggling, and leave a quick review so more women can find support. I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you. Follow me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/histaminehealthcoach?igsh=MXBudWJpanBzaWg2MA%3D%3D&utm_source=qr] Follow me on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094863274206] Email: teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com [teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com] Website: https://histaminehealthcoach.com [https://histaminehealthcoach.com]

21. maj 202611 min
episode Episode 34 - Histamine Intolerance And The Nighttime Alarm System artwork

Episode 34 - Histamine Intolerance And The Nighttime Alarm System

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2518343/fan_mail/new] You crawl into bed exhausted, fall asleep, and then it happens again: you wake up in the middle of the night and your body feels wide awake. Maybe it’s the same window every night. Maybe your mind spins, you feel warm or restless, or you even notice itching, flushing, or that uncomfortable “on” feeling that makes no sense when you were so tired at bedtime. I’m Teresa Christensen, a functional medicine certified health coach, and I live with histamine intolerance too. Here, I unpack a different way to understand nighttime awakenings and insomnia: sometimes the real issue isn’t sleep itself, it’s what your body is doing while you’re trying to sleep. We talk about why sleep is supposed to be a time of deep regulation, from hormone balance to blood sugar control, and what changes when your system stays slightly activated instead of settling into repair. You’ll hear how histamine supports wakefulness, why nighttime histamine can feel like a surge in a sensitive body, and how stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol can flip the switch from rest to alert. I also share a personal CGM experiment that revealed unexpected overnight blood sugar changes, making it clear that a “random” wake up can actually be your body stabilizing in real time. We end with a mindset shift that helps: asking what your body is trying to regulate, and focusing on rhythm, safety cues, and overall load rather than blaming yourself for one bad night. If this resonates, subscribe for more practical support for histamine intolerance, share this with a friend who wakes up at 2 a.m., and leave a review so more women can find relief. What time do you usually wake up at night? I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you. Follow me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/histaminehealthcoach?igsh=MXBudWJpanBzaWg2MA%3D%3D&utm_source=qr] Follow me on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094863274206] Email: teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com [teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com] Website: https://histaminehealthcoach.com [https://histaminehealthcoach.com]

7. maj 202613 min
episode Episode 33 - Latex: The Hidden Trigger (With an Added Ingredient) artwork

Episode 33 - Latex: The Hidden Trigger (With an Added Ingredient)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2518343/fan_mail/new] A “simple” bandage shouldn’t leave your skin looking and feeling burned for days, yet that’s exactly what can happen when latex enters the picture and your histamine threshold is already low. We’re unpacking the sneaky role of hidden latex exposure in histamine intolerance, MCAS, and mast cell flares, especially when reactions feel random or out of proportion. If you’ve ever thought, “Why is my body doing this?” this conversation offers a missing piece that can finally make the pattern click. I share my personal experiences with latex burns from bandages, immediate stinging from a cosmetic sponge, and welts triggered by workout clothes where sweat and friction turn an elastic waistband into a problem. We break down the difference between Type 1 IgE latex allergy and Type 4 delayed contact sensitivity, plus why heat, moisture, and skin irritation can amplify symptoms when your system is already primed for a histamine storm. We also talk about a topic many people don’t connect to latex at all: condoms. If you’ve had burning, itching, or pain after sex, natural rubber latex may be worth considering, and there are latex-free alternatives like polyisoprene options (including SKYN). Then we get practical with everyday steps: requesting latex-free supplies at the dentist and doctor, choosing safer bandages, rethinking makeup tools, and making smarter clothing choices to reduce triggers. If this helps you see your symptoms differently, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who needs answers, and leave a review so more women can find real support for histamine intolerance and MCAS. What’s one “random” reaction you’re ready to investigate? Here's the link to Histamine, Latex, and Food - What's the connection?https://histaminehealthcoach.com/articles-%26-episodes/f/histamine-latex-and-food%E2%80%94what%E2%80%99s-the-connection [https://histaminehealthcoach.com/articles-%26-episodes/f/histamine-latex-and-food%E2%80%94what%E2%80%99s-the-connection] I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you. Follow me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/histaminehealthcoach?igsh=MXBudWJpanBzaWg2MA%3D%3D&utm_source=qr] Follow me on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094863274206] Email: teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com [teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com] Website: https://histaminehealthcoach.com [https://histaminehealthcoach.com]

24. apr. 20269 min
episode Episode 32 - Wheat Is Not High Histamine… So Why Is It Wrecking Your Week? artwork

Episode 32 - Wheat Is Not High Histamine… So Why Is It Wrecking Your Week?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2518343/fan_mail/new] Wheat can feel like the ultimate “gotcha” food when you live with histamine intolerance. One week you eat bread with no problem, the next week you get headaches, body aches, GI symptoms, or brain fog and you start questioning everything. We get why that spiral happens, and we slow it down with a more realistic lens: wheat is not usually a high histamine food, but it can still affect your histamine load and push a full histamine bucket over the edge. We walk through my own recent experiment with eating more wheat at home and what changed when I simply pulled back without going extreme. From there we unpack the hidden variables that make wheat such a confusing suspect: portion size, frequency, blood sugar swings, digestion, stress, sleep, and what else your body is managing. We also talk about the “wheat rarely shows up alone” problem, because bread often comes with processed meats, cheese, tomato sauce, and leftovers, all of which can raise histamine or create a stack of triggers that gets mislabeled as a gluten issue. We also zoom out to the bigger story: the gluten-free era, the COVID bread baking boom, and why trends can’t replace body awareness. If you are navigating histamine intolerance, low histamine diet choices, or suspected wheat sensitivity, you’ll leave with a grounded way to use food, mood, and symptom tracking to find patterns without turning your diet into a rulebook. If this helps, subscribe, share it with a friend who feels stuck with food, and leave a review so more women can find the show. What has been your most confusing “trigger” food lately? I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you. Follow me on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/histaminehealthcoach?igsh=MXBudWJpanBzaWg2MA%3D%3D&utm_source=qr] Follow me on Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100094863274206] Email: teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com [teresa@histaminehealthcoach.com] Website: https://histaminehealthcoach.com [https://histaminehealthcoach.com]

2. apr. 202610 min