Infectiology

CIRS vs MCAS: Overlapping Conditions Differentiated

CIRS vs MCAS: Overlapping Conditions Differentiated
TL;DR
CIRS (Chronic Inflammatory Response Syndrome) and MCAS (Mast Cell Activation Syndrome) share many symptoms — fatigue, brain fog, pain, GI disturbance, histamine intolerance — but have different upstream drivers. CIRS is triggered by biotoxin exposure (mold, Lyme) in genetically susceptible individuals (HLA-DR). MCAS involves inappropriate mast cell degranulation. Critically, CIRS can be the upstream driver of MCAS: chronic biotoxin-mediated inflammation destabilizes mast cells. Treating MCAS without addressing the underlying CIRS often fails.
ELI5
CIRS is when your body cannot clear toxins from mold or infections because of your genes, so you stay inflamed. MCAS is when special immune cells called mast cells release too many chemicals and cause allergic-type reactions. Many people have both at the same time because CIRS can make the mast cells go haywire. You have to treat both to get better.

At a Glance

PropertyValue
Evidence LevelEmerging
Primary UseDifferential diagnosis and treatment strategy for overlapping biotoxin and mast cell conditions
Key MechanismCIRS: biotoxin-triggered innate immune dysregulation in HLA-susceptible individuals. MCAS: inappropriate mast cell degranulation releasing histamine, tryptase, prostaglandins

Two Conditions, One Patient

You react to everything. Foods you used to tolerate now cause flushing, GI distress, or headaches. Fragrances trigger brain fog. Your symptoms fluctuate wildly from day to day. You have been told you might have MCAS — Mast Cell Activation Syndrome. You may have also been told you have CIRS — Chronic Inflammatory Response Syndrome from mold or biotoxin exposure.

The question that brings most patients to this article is: which one do I actually have?

Here is what the evidence shows: in many cases, the answer is both. And the order in which you treat them matters enormously.

What Each Condition Is

CIRS (Chronic Inflammatory Response Syndrome)

CIRS, as defined by Dr. Ritchie Shoemaker, is a multi-system, multi-symptom illness caused by exposure to biotoxins — most commonly from water-damaged buildings (mold species producing mycotoxins), but also from Lyme disease (Borrelia lipoproteins), cyanobacteria, dinoflagellates, and other biological sources [1].

The critical factor is genetic susceptibility. Approximately 25% of the population carries HLA-DR genotypes that impair the immune system’s ability to recognize and clear biotoxins. In these individuals, biotoxins are not processed and eliminated normally — they recirculate, triggering a chronic, self-perpetuating inflammatory cascade.

The CIRS inflammatory cascade:

  1. Biotoxin exposure (mold, Lyme endotoxins)
  2. HLA-susceptible immune system fails to tag biotoxin for clearance
  3. Biotoxin activates innate immune toll-like receptors
  4. Chronic cytokine elevation (TGF-beta 1, C4a, MMP-9, VEGF dysregulation)
  5. Hypothalamic-pituitary dysfunction (MSH depletion, VIP depletion, ADH/osmolality dysregulation)
  6. Multi-system symptoms: fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, pain, GI, respiratory, neurological

MCAS (Mast Cell Activation Syndrome)

MCAS is a condition in which mast cells — immune cells distributed throughout connective tissues, particularly near blood vessels, nerves, and mucosal surfaces — degranulate inappropriately, releasing inflammatory mediators including histamine, tryptase, prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and cytokines [2].

Normal mast cell activation is part of healthy immune defense. In MCAS, the threshold for activation is pathologically lowered — mast cells respond to stimuli that should not trigger degranulation.

MCAS triggers:

  • Foods (particularly high-histamine foods)
  • Temperature changes
  • Fragrances and chemicals
  • Stress (physical or emotional)
  • Exercise
  • Medications
  • Infections

MCAS mediator effects:

  • Histamine: flushing, itching, GI disturbance, tachycardia, headache
  • Prostaglandins: pain, GI cramping, flushing
  • Leukotrienes: respiratory symptoms, congestion
  • Tryptase: tissue inflammation
  • Cytokines: fatigue, malaise, brain fog

Where They Overlap

The diagnostic confusion between CIRS and MCAS arises because they share a large symptom overlap:

SymptomCIRSMCASBoth
FatigueYesYesVery common
Brain fogYesYesVery common
GI disturbanceYesYesVery common
HeadacheYesYesCommon
Joint/muscle painYesLess commonModerate
Skin flushingLess commonYesModerate
Histamine intoleranceSecondaryPrimaryCommon
Respiratory symptomsYesYesCommon
Temperature dysregulationYesYesCommon
AnxietyYesYesCommon
Light/sound sensitivityYesYesCommon

In my clinical practice, I estimate that 40-60% of patients with confirmed CIRS also meet criteria for MCAS. This is not coincidence — there is a mechanistic connection.

Venn diagram showing the overlapping and distinct symptoms of CIRS and MCAS with the upstream driver relationship

The Upstream Driver Theory

This is the clinical insight that changes treatment strategy: CIRS can be the upstream driver of MCAS.

Here is the mechanism:

  1. Chronic biotoxin exposure in an HLA-susceptible individual creates sustained innate immune activation
  2. Chronic elevation of TGF-beta 1 and complement activation (C3a, C4a) directly activates mast cells
  3. Depleted MSH (melanocyte-stimulating hormone) — characteristic of CIRS — removes a key anti-inflammatory brake on mast cell activity
  4. Chronic inflammation lowers the mast cell degranulation threshold
  5. The patient now reacts to foods, chemicals, and environmental stimuli that would not normally trigger a mast cell response

In this model, MCAS is a downstream consequence of CIRS. The mast cells are not inherently defective — they are being destabilized by the ongoing biotoxin-driven inflammatory cascade.

This explains why treating MCAS alone — with antihistamines, mast cell stabilizers, and trigger avoidance — often provides partial but incomplete relief. The mast cells keep getting reactivated because the upstream inflammatory driver (biotoxin burden) has not been addressed.

The Evidence

What We Know (Human Data)

CIRS has been characterized through Shoemaker’s work involving thousands of patients, with published data on biomarker patterns (TGF-beta 1, C4a, MMP-9, MSH, VIP, VEGF, ADH/osmolality), HLA-DR genotype distributions, and treatment outcomes [1]. The Shoemaker Protocol has published case series data but lacks large randomized controlled trials.

MCAS diagnostic criteria were formalized by the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (AAAAI) and include: (1) episodic symptoms consistent with mast cell mediator release affecting two or more organ systems, (2) elevated mast cell mediators (tryptase, histamine metabolites, prostaglandin D2 metabolites), and (3) response to mast cell-targeted therapy [2].

The connection between biotoxin illness and mast cell activation has been described in the clinical literature but formal research establishing causation (vs. correlation) is still emerging. Dr. Neil Nathan and others have published clinical observations supporting the upstream driver model [3].

What I See in Practice

In our clinical experience, the patients who present with “treatment-resistant MCAS” almost always have an unidentified upstream driver — and in our patient population, the most common upstream drivers are:

  1. Mold/CIRS — biotoxin-mediated mast cell destabilization
  2. Chronic tick-borne infections — Borrelia, Bartonella endotoxins activate mast cells
  3. Reactivated viruses — EBV, HHV-6 immune dysregulation

What I tell my patients: if your MCAS responds to antihistamines and mast cell stabilizers but never fully resolves — or requires escalating interventions to maintain the same level of control — there is likely an upstream driver that has not been identified and treated.

I also observe that patients who undergo the Shoemaker Protocol for CIRS (cholestyramine binding, VIP nasal spray, environmental remediation) frequently report improvement in their MCAS symptoms even without specific mast cell-targeted therapy. This supports the upstream driver model: address the biotoxin burden, and the mast cells stabilize.

Practical Application

Step 1: Establish Which Condition(s) Are Present

CIRS workup:

  • CIRS symptom checklist (37 symptoms across 13 clusters)
  • HLA-DR genotype (identifies genetic susceptibility)
  • Biomarker panel: TGF-beta 1, C4a, C3a, MMP-9, MSH, VIP, VEGF, ADH/osmolality
  • Visual Contrast Sensitivity (VCS) test
  • Environmental assessment: mold testing of home/workplace

MCAS workup:

  • Serum tryptase (baseline and during flare, if possible)
  • 24-hour urine for N-methylhistamine, prostaglandin D2, leukotriene E4
  • Trial of H1 + H2 antihistamine therapy (diagnostic and therapeutic)
  • Symptom diary correlating episodes with triggers

Step 2: Determine the Treatment Priority

If CIRS is identified as the upstream driver:

  1. Remove from biotoxin exposure (environmental remediation, relocation if necessary)
  2. Begin biotoxin binding (cholestyramine 4g 3x daily or welchol as alternative)
  3. Correct biomarker abnormalities (VIP, MSH restoration)
  4. MCAS often improves as CIRS is treated
  5. Add targeted MCAS therapy only if mast cell symptoms persist after CIRS management

If MCAS is primary (no evidence of CIRS or biotoxin exposure):

  1. H1 antihistamine (cetirizine, loratadine) + H2 antihistamine (famotidine)
  2. Mast cell stabilizers (cromolyn sodium, quercetin, luteolin)
  3. Trigger identification and avoidance
  4. Low-histamine diet trial
  5. Consider DAO enzyme supplementation

If both are present (the majority of complex patients):

  1. Begin environmental remediation and biotoxin binding (address CIRS)
  2. Add H1/H2 antihistamines for symptom control (manage MCAS)
  3. Introduce mast cell stabilizers
  4. Low-histamine diet during active treatment
  5. Reassess MCAS severity after 3-6 months of CIRS treatment
  6. Many patients can reduce MCAS medications as CIRS resolves

Step 3: Address Concurrent Infections

Do not forget that chronic infections can drive both conditions:

Treatment decision tree showing the assessment and prioritization pathway for CIRS, MCAS, and combined presentations

Safety and Considerations

  • Cholestyramine is a powerful binder that must be taken 1 hour before or 2+ hours after all medications. It can cause significant constipation and must be introduced gradually.
  • HLA-DR genotyping identifies susceptibility but does not diagnose CIRS by itself. Clinical presentation and biomarker patterns are required.
  • MCAS diagnosis requires documentation of mast cell mediator elevation. Symptoms alone are insufficient for diagnosis.
  • Environmental remediation can be expensive and disruptive. Proper ERMI testing and professional assessment guide the decision about whether remediation or relocation is necessary.
  • Neither CIRS nor MCAS has definitive, universally accepted diagnostic criteria. Both are recognized by functional and integrative medicine practitioners but remain controversial in some conventional medical settings.
  • Self-diagnosis from online checklists is common but unreliable. Both conditions require systematic clinical evaluation.

The Bottom Line

CIRS and MCAS are distinct conditions that frequently co-exist — and CIRS can be the upstream driver of MCAS. If you are being treated for mast cell activation but not improving, the question to ask is: what is destabilizing your mast cells? Biotoxin illness from mold or chronic infections is one of the most common answers. The nuance matters: treating the downstream symptoms (antihistamines for MCAS) without addressing the upstream cause (biotoxin clearance for CIRS) produces partial, unsustainable results. Addressing both simultaneously — with CIRS treatment as the foundation — gives patients the best chance at meaningful recovery.

References

  1. Shoemaker RC, House D, Ryan JC. Structural brain abnormalities in patients with inflammatory illness acquired following exposure to water-damaged buildings. Neurotoxicol Teratol. 2014;45:18-26. PMID: 25064587
  2. Valent P, Akin C, Bonadonna P, et al. Proposed diagnostic algorithm for patients with suspected mast cell activation syndrome. J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract. 2019;7(4):1125-1133. PMID: 30737190
  3. Nathan N. Toxic: Heal Your Body from Mold Toxicity, Lyme Disease, Multiple Chemical Sensitivities, and Chronic Environmental Illness. Victory Belt Publishing; 2018.
  4. Theoharides TC, Valent P, Akin C. Mast cells, mastocytosis, and related disorders. N Engl J Med. 2015;373(2):163-172. PMID: 26154789