Tag: poison-ivy

  • Mango Allergies & Poison Ivy: The Urushiol Link Explained

    Mango Allergies & Poison Ivy: The Urushiol Link Explained

    Mangoes can trigger the same itchy, blistering rash as poison ivy because both plants belong to the Anacardiaceae family and both contain urushiol, the oily compound responsible for allergic contact dermatitis. The urushiol in mangoes is concentrated in the skin, sap, and leaves, and roughly 1 to 2 percent of the general population reports a reaction, with higher rates among people already sensitized to poison ivy or poison oak. For our Texas customers, who often spend weekends hiking the Hill Country or the Piney Woods where poison ivy is abundant, understanding this botanical connection can prevent an unpleasant surprise when a fresh box of Alphonso or Kesar arrives at the door.

    Our team at Swadeshi Mangoes has fielded enough questions about itchy lips and rashy fingers over the years that we decided to put together a thorough, evidence-based explainer. This post draws on peer-reviewed dermatology research, the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, and USDA food-safety guidance to help you enjoy the nine Indian varieties we ship across Texas without the itch.

    What Is Urushiol and Why Does It Matter?

    Urushiol is a mixture of catechols, specifically alkyl-substituted 3-n-pentadecylcatechols and related compounds. It is the same irritant that causes roughly 50 million cases of poison ivy, oak, and sumac dermatitis every year in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. When urushiol contacts skin, it binds to proteins in the outer epidermis and triggers a Type IV delayed hypersensitivity reaction in sensitized individuals.

    A 2019 review published in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology noted that urushiol is remarkably stable and can remain allergenic on surfaces, clothing, or even dried plant material for years. That same stability is why a mango left on the counter for three days can still produce a reaction if the sap from the stem end contacts sensitive skin.

    The Anacardiaceae Family Tree

    Anacardiaceae is a botanical family of about 860 species that includes some of our favorite foods and some of our worst allergens. Cashews, pistachios, sumac spice, pink peppercorns, mangoes, and poison ivy are all cousins. The family shares biochemistry, which means urushiol-like compounds appear across the clan. If you react to cashew shells or raw pistachio skins, there is a plausible biological reason you may also react to mango peel.

    Where Is Urushiol Found in a Mango?

    Research from the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (2014) mapped the distribution of urushiol-related compounds in Mangifera indica and found the highest concentrations in the peel, the stem, the sap that weeps from the stem end after picking, and the leaves. The flesh itself contains only trace amounts. This matters because most reactions happen when people peel a mango with their bare hands or bite into the fruit with skin still attached, not when they eat the cut flesh.

    How Much Urushiol Is in Each Variety?

    There is no published varietal comparison for the nine varieties we carry, but anecdotally our team has noticed Banginapalli and Totapuri tend to weep more sap at the stem than Alphonso or Mallika. Kesar, Himayath, Chinna Rasalu, Suvarna Rekha, and Dasheri fall somewhere in the middle. Across all varieties, the risk profile is similar once the fruit is peeled and the flesh is separated.

    Symptoms of a Mango-Urushiol Reaction

    Reactions typically appear 12 to 72 hours after contact, which is classic for Type IV hypersensitivity. Common symptoms include:

    • Red, itchy patches around the lips, chin, and cheeks
    • Small fluid-filled blisters that may weep
    • Swelling of the lips or perioral skin
    • Rash on hands, forearms, or anywhere the peel or sap touched
    • Burning or tingling at first contact in highly sensitized individuals

    True IgE-mediated mango allergy, which causes hives, throat tightness, or anaphylaxis within minutes, is far rarer. A 2017 case series in Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology documented fewer than 50 published cases worldwide, and most involved people with concurrent latex allergy, known as latex-fruit syndrome.

    Cross-Reactivity Data: What the Research Shows

    Cross-reactivity between poison ivy and mango has been studied since the 1930s. A landmark 1998 study in Contact Dermatitis patch-tested 85 poison-ivy-sensitive volunteers with mango peel extract; 18 of them, or 21 percent, showed a positive reaction. The researchers concluded that prior poison ivy sensitization is the single biggest risk factor for mango dermatitis.

    Population GroupReported Reaction RateSource
    General US population1 to 2 percentAAAAI 2020 review
    Poison-ivy-sensitized adults17 to 21 percentContact Dermatitis 1998
    Latex allergy patients33 to 47 percent (any mango reaction)J Allergy Clin Immunol 2003
    Cashew-allergic childrenLimited data, estimated 10 to 20 percentPediatric Allergy Immunol 2016
    No prior sensitizationLess than 1 percentAAAAI 2020 review

    Safe Handling: A Texas Mango Lover’s Checklist

    Because we deliver thousands of mango boxes across Austin, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio every season, we have refined a simple handling protocol that dramatically reduces contact risk:

    1. Rinse the Fruit First

    Run each mango under cool tap water for 20 to 30 seconds and gently rub the surface. This removes surface sap, pesticide residue, and any particulate matter picked up during the Texas summer heat.

    2. Use a Paring Knife, Not Your Teeth

    Biting into an unpeeled mango is the single most common way people expose perioral skin to urushiol. Always peel first.

    3. Wear Nitrile Gloves If You Are Sensitized

    If you know you react to poison ivy or cashews, wear disposable nitrile gloves while peeling. Latex gloves are not recommended because of the latex-fruit syndrome overlap.

    4. Wash Hands and Knives with Dish Soap

    Urushiol is an oil. Plain water will not remove it. Dish soap or a dedicated urushiol wash like Tecnu cuts the oil effectively.

    5. Store Cut Mango Separately

    Once peeled and cubed, the flesh is essentially urushiol-free. Keep peels in a sealed bag and discard within 24 hours.

    What to Do If You React

    Mild contact dermatitis usually resolves in 1 to 3 weeks. Over-the-counter 1 percent hydrocortisone cream, cool compresses, and oral antihistamines like cetirizine can reduce itching. See a physician if blistering is extensive, if the rash affects the eyes or genitals, or if you develop systemic symptoms such as hives or difficulty breathing. For our Texas customers, urgent care clinics across the major metros can prescribe oral prednisone for severe cases.

    Why We Still Recommend Mangoes

    The overwhelming majority of our customers across Texas, probably 98 percent, eat our mangoes season after season with zero issues. Mango-urushiol dermatitis is real but uncommon, and it is entirely preventable with basic handling hygiene. The nutritional and cultural value of a ripe Alphonso or Kesar, particularly for the Indian diaspora in Texas who wait all year for the April-to-July harvest window, far outweighs a small, manageable risk for most people.

    If you are unsure whether you are sensitized, try a small test: peel a mango wearing gloves, wash your hands thoroughly, then eat a single cube of flesh. If no reaction develops within 72 hours, you are almost certainly fine to continue.

    FAQ

    Can I be allergic to mango but not poison ivy?

    Yes, though it is uncommon. True IgE-mediated mango allergy is distinct from urushiol contact dermatitis and can occur in people who have never encountered poison ivy. It typically presents with hives, swelling, or anaphylaxis within minutes of eating the flesh, not a delayed rash. If you suspect this type of reaction, see an allergist for skin prick or specific IgE testing before ordering more mangoes in Texas.

    Is the mango flesh itself safe for poison-ivy-sensitive people?

    Generally, yes. Urushiol is concentrated in the peel, stem, and sap, with only trace amounts in the ripe flesh. Most poison-ivy-sensitive people can eat peeled, cubed mango without issue. Our Texas customers who react only to the peel simply ask a household member to do the peeling or use nitrile gloves. The cut flesh stored separately almost never causes problems.

    Does cooking or drying mango destroy the urushiol?

    Heat does not reliably break down urushiol. Dried mango, mango pickle, and even mango chutney can retain allergenic activity if peel fragments are present. Commercial aamchur powder, which is ground dried green mango, has caused documented reactions. If you are highly sensitized, stick to clearly peeled and de-skinned products and avoid unpeeled dried slices.

    Can children develop mango dermatitis?

    Yes, though it is rare under age five. Sensitization usually requires prior exposure to urushiol from poison ivy or related plants, which children often have not had. That said, children with cashew or pistachio allergy may cross-react. In Texas, where poison ivy is widespread, we recommend introducing mango in peeled, cubed form and monitoring for any delayed rash.

    Will repeated exposure make my mango allergy worse?

    For urushiol contact dermatitis, repeated exposure can intensify future reactions, a phenomenon called priming. Each episode can make the immune system more reactive. If you have had even a mild reaction, we recommend using gloves or having someone else peel. True IgE-mediated food allergy is different and can also worsen with exposure, which is why testing with an allergist is valuable.

    For more on variety selection, see our mango varieties guide, and for storage best practices visit mango care. Ready to order this season? Our order form covers Austin, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio pickup from April through July 2026.

    Not medical advice. Consult your doctor for specific conditions. For peer-reviewed sources, see PubMed, USDA FoodData Central, and the National Mango Board.

  • What Happens When You Eat Too Many Mangoes

    What Happens When You Eat Too Many Mangoes

    You told yourself you would eat just one. Then the box was open and the Alphonso was right there and it smelled so good and now somehow four mangoes are gone and you are questioning your life choices. What happens next?

    You are not alone. Every mango season, we hear from customers who opened a box of Alphonso or Kesar with the best intentions and found themselves standing over the kitchen sink twenty minutes later with mango juice dripping off their elbows. Here is exactly what your body goes through when you overindulge.


    The Immediate Aftermath

    First, the good news: eating too many mangoes will not kill you. It will not even come close. But your body will let you know it was not expecting a mango marathon.

    Stomach Discomfort

    Mangoes are high in fiber (1.6g per 100g) and natural sugars (13.7g per 100g). Four mangoes at once means roughly 6g of fiber and 55g of sugar hitting your digestive system. The result: bloating, gas, and possibly a strong urge to find a bathroom.

    This is temporary. Your body will process everything within 4-8 hours. Drink water and wait it out.

    The fiber in mangoes is a mix of soluble and insoluble types. Soluble fiber absorbs water and forms a gel-like substance in your gut, causing that uncomfortable fullness. Your gut bacteria ferment the excess fiber, producing gas. This is completely normal — just your microbiome working overtime.

    The Sugar Spike

    Your blood sugar will spike, then crash. You may feel energetic for 30 minutes followed by a noticeable dip. If you are not diabetic, your insulin response will handle it. If you are diabetic, please stop at one mango.

    Four mangoes deliver roughly 55-60 grams of natural sugar — about the same as a 20-ounce bottle of soda. The difference is that mango sugar comes with fiber and vitamins that slow absorption. Next time, eat some nuts or cheese alongside your mangoes — fat and protein slow sugar absorption significantly.

    Mouth Irritation

    If you ate the mangoes near the skin, the sap (urushiol, related to poison ivy) can cause a tingly, itchy feeling around your lips and mouth. This is not an allergy — it is a contact irritation. Wash your face with soap and it will pass in an hour.

    This is more common with Totapuri and less common with Alphonso. If you are prone to this, cut the cheeks away from the skin and eat with a spoon rather than biting directly into the fruit.

    The Not-So-Bad Side Effects

    Vitamin A Overdose? Not Really.

    Mangoes are high in beta-carotene, which your body converts to Vitamin A as needed. Unlike preformed Vitamin A (retinol), beta-carotene does not cause toxicity — your body simply stops converting it when it has enough. The worst that happens is a slight orange tint to your palms if you eat mangoes daily for weeks. This is called carotenemia and it is harmless and reversible.

    The discoloration is most visible on palms and soles of the feet. It disappears completely within a few weeks of reducing intake. Think of it as your body’s way of saying “I have enough Vitamin A, thanks.”

    Skin Glow

    The Vitamin C and beta-carotene in a mango binge will actually give your skin a healthy glow for the next day or two. So there is that.

    Research published in PLOS ONE found that increased carotenoid intake from fruits led to measurable improvements in skin appearance. So while your stomach might be protesting, your face is benefiting.

    What Happens If You Do This Every Day

    A one-time mango binge is harmless. But what if you eat 3-4 mangoes every day for the entire season?

    Weight gain: One mango contains roughly 100-150 calories. Four per day adds 400-600 calories. Over a two-month season, that could mean 7-10 extra pounds if you do not adjust other food intake. Banginapalli, being the largest variety, packs the most calories. Chinna Rasalu, being smaller, is easier to portion-control.

    Digestive adaptation: Your gut actually adapts to consistent fiber intake. The bloating you experienced on day one will likely diminish by day four as your gut bacteria adjust.

    Nutrient surplus: You will get far more Vitamin C and Vitamin A than you need, but since both are regulated by your body (in the case of beta-carotene), there is no danger of toxicity.

    Can You Be Allergic to Mangoes?

    True mango allergy is rare but it exists. The allergen is in the skin, not the flesh. Symptoms include:

    • Swelling of lips, tongue, or throat (seek medical help immediately)
    • Skin rash on hands or face after handling the skin
    • Itchy hives

    If you have a latex allergy or are allergic to cashews or pistachios (all in the same botanical family), you may be more likely to react to mango skin. The flesh is usually safe even for these individuals.

    Contact dermatitis from mango skin is an irritant reaction, not an immune-mediated allergy. True anaphylactic mango allergy is extremely rare. If you have had skin irritation from mango skin, you can almost certainly still eat the flesh — just have someone else peel it for you.

    How Different Varieties Affect You

    Not all mango binges are created equal. The variety matters:

    • Alphonso: Richest and most calorie-dense due to high sugar and low water content. You will feel full faster, so it is actually harder to overeat. The sugar spike will be more pronounced.
    • Banginapalli: Larger fruit with higher water content. Easier to eat in quantity because it feels lighter, but you consume more total volume.
    • Kesar: Moderate in every way. The aromatic punch makes each bite satisfying, so you may naturally eat less.
    • Totapuri: Tangier and less sweet. Unlikely to binge on this one, but the high acid content can cause mouth sores and stomach acidity in excess.
    • Suvarna Rekha: Smaller fruit with concentrated sweetness. Easy to lose count — “I only had a few” can quickly become seven.

    The Recovery Protocol

    If you have already overdone it and you are reading this while clutching your stomach:

    1. Drink water. Lots of it. Warm water is even better for digestion.
    2. Go for a walk. Even 10-15 minutes of light movement relieves bloating noticeably.
    3. Eat light at the next meal. Your body just received a significant caloric load. Soup or salad will be plenty.
    4. Stay upright. The acid from mango combined with a very full stomach can cause reflux if you recline. Wait at least an hour before lying down.
    5. Fennel tea or ajwain water. Boil a teaspoon of fennel seeds or ajwain (carom seeds) in water, strain, and sip. Traditional Indian remedies for bloating that actually work.

    The Ideal Daily Intake

    For most adults, 1-2 mangoes per day is the sweet spot (pun intended). This gives you the nutritional benefits without the digestive drama.

    But we know how mango season works. Some days you will eat three. Some days you will eat the mango you cut for your kid because “it looked too good.” The season is short. Live your life.

    If you consistently eat more than two per day, adjust your other food intake accordingly. Reduce your rice or bread portion at dinner. Let the mango be the indulgence rather than adding it on top of everything else.

    Order your next box and test your limits responsibly.

    How to Pace Yourself with Smart Storage

    One practical way to avoid a binge is to control your ripening schedule. If all 12 mangoes in your box ripen at once, willpower is your only defense — and willpower loses to Alphonso every time.

    Instead: when your box arrives, leave 3-4 mangoes on the counter to ripen. Put the rest in the refrigerator to slow ripening. As you finish the first batch, move the next group to the counter. This gives you 1-2 perfectly ripe mangoes per day instead of 12 ripe mangoes on a Tuesday afternoon. Check our complete ripening and storage guide for detailed tips.

    Mango Season in Texas

    Swadeshi delivers fresh Indian mangoes to Austin, Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio from April through July. Pace yourself — or do not. We do not judge. Visit our FAQ page for common questions, or browse the blog for more mango tips and recipes.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How many mangoes can you eat in a day?

    For most adults, 1-2 mangoes per day is ideal for nutritional benefits without digestive discomfort. Eating more is not dangerous but may cause bloating, gas, and a temporary blood sugar spike.

    Can you be allergic to mangoes?

    True mango allergy is rare. The allergen is in the skin (urushiol, related to poison ivy), not the flesh. People with latex or cashew allergies may be more susceptible. If you experience swelling of lips or throat, seek medical attention.

    Do mangoes cause weight gain?

    One mango contains about 100-150 calories. Eating 1-2 per day within a balanced diet will not cause weight gain. Eating 4-5 daily over a full season without adjusting other food intake could add significant calories.

Chat on WhatsApp