Key points

  • You can have real and sometimes severe symptoms without having a classic allergy.
  • Allergy, intolerance, and non-IgE reactions involve different biological pathways.
  • Similar symptoms (such as wheeze or mucus) do not always mean the same cause.
  • The term “intolerance” is often used as a catch-all, which can be confusing.
  • For people with lung conditions, triggers may still worsen symptoms even when allergy tests are negative.

This article is general educational information for patients and carers. If you are new to this topic, you may wish to start with our overview of what is aspergillosis or explore common symptoms affecting the lungs and airways.

Contents

Why this is so confusing

Many people use the word “allergy” to describe any reaction to food or environmental triggers. This is understandable, because the symptoms can feel very similar.

For example:

However, similar symptoms do not always mean the same biological cause. This is where confusion begins.

What is a true allergy?

A true allergy usually refers to an IgE-mediated immune reaction.

This means the immune system reacts quickly to a substance, often within minutes to a couple of hours. Symptoms may include:

This type of reaction is what most allergy clinics are designed to detect, because it can be serious and is usually testable.

What is an intolerance?

An intolerance is a broader term used when symptoms do not follow the classic IgE allergy pathway.

It may involve:

  • digestive processes
  • food chemicals such as histamine or salicylates
  • gut–immune interactions
  • non-specific inflammation

Importantly: intolerance does not mean “mild” or “unimportant”. It simply means the mechanism is different and often harder to measure.

For guidance on managing food-related symptoms, see our diet and nutrition hub.

The grey area: non-IgE reactions

Not all immune reactions involve IgE.

Some reactions involve other parts of the immune system and may be:

  • delayed
  • longer lasting
  • harder to detect with standard tests

This creates a grey area between “allergy” and “intolerance”.

This is why the statement:

“Same symptoms but no IgE = intolerance”

is often an oversimplification.

Wheat as an example

Wheat reactions are often used to illustrate this complexity:

  • Wheat allergy → IgE reaction to wheat proteins
  • Coeliac disease → autoimmune condition (see NICE guidance)
  • Non-coeliac wheat sensitivity → unclear mechanism
  • Carbohydrate intolerance → reaction to fructans (FODMAPs)

All of these may cause symptoms, but they require different ways of understanding and managing.

Why “downgraded” feels upsetting

Patients are sometimes told they have been “downgraded” from allergy to intolerance.

In reality, what has usually happened is:

  • a classic IgE allergy has been considered unlikely
  • testing is unlikely to add further information
  • the reaction falls into a less clearly defined category

This is a change in classification, not a judgement about importance or severity.

Why this matters in asthma and aspergillosis

For people with asthma, Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis (ABPA), or chronic pulmonary aspergillosis (CPA):

  • airways are often more sensitive
  • inflammation may already be present

This means that triggers do not always need to be classic allergens to cause problems.

Symptoms such as wheeze, mucus and chest tightness may worsen even when allergy tests are negative.

You may also find it helpful to read why antibiotics do not always work, which explains how non-bacterial causes can drive ongoing symptoms.

Why testing is often limited

Allergy testing works best for IgE-mediated conditions.

For many other reactions:

  • there are no simple validated tests
  • diagnosis relies more on clinical history and patterns

Further detail for clinicians and advanced readers is available in our information section for patients.

What usually happens next?

After a classic allergy has been ruled out, the process does not stop—it changes direction.

Understanding patterns

The focus often shifts to identifying:

  • what triggers symptoms
  • how quickly symptoms occur
  • whether effects are delayed or cumulative

Identifying the main system involved

  • Gut-related → bloating, pain, bowel symptoms
  • Airway-related → wheeze, mucus, chest tightness
  • Mixed/systemic → fatigue and general symptoms

Different types of support

Depending on the pattern, support may involve:

This stage is often less clear-cut but can still lead to meaningful improvements over time.

Take-home message

  • Allergy and intolerance are not the same.
  • “Intolerance” is often used as a broad label.
  • Symptoms may be similar, but the underlying pathways differ.
  • This affects how conditions are understood and managed.
  • Even without a clear label, symptoms remain real and important.

When to seek medical advice

Seek urgent help if you develop:

  • sudden breathing difficulty
  • swelling of the lips, tongue or throat
  • collapse or severe dizziness

Arrange medical review if you have:

  • persistent or worsening symptoms
  • repeated reactions to foods or triggers
  • worsening respiratory symptoms

Related topics

References

  1. NHS – Food allergy and intolerance
  2. BSACI – Food allergy guidance
  3. NICE NG20 – Coeliac disease

Last reviewed: April 2026

Author: Aspergillosis Website Team

Review status: Educational content for patients and carers

Path: Start » Immune System » Allergy, Intolerance and Wheat Reactions: What Is Actually Going On?

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