Kids Food Allergies
A food
allergy, or hypersensitivity, is an abnormal
reaction to a food triggered by the immune system.
Food allergies are most common in the first three
years of life. They are more likely to be experienced
by those who have a family history of food allergies,
or in those with a broader allergic family history
(allergy, eczema, or asthma).
Food allergies are also most common
in babies who are exposed to foods likely to have
an allergic reaction at an early age. About ninety
percent of food allergies in babies and children
are related to one of the five foods: cow’s
milk, soy, eggs, peanuts, or wheat. Most children
with food allergies have an allergy to a single
food, although the possibility of getting multiple
allergies is always there. A significant minority
of those kids who are allergic to cow’s
milk are also allergic to soy.
Most kids outgrow their food allergies.
Outgrowing milk and soy allergies is usually observed
by the first birthday. The majority of them have
outgrown their allergies by the time they are
three. Even those who still have food allergies
at three will, in normal circumstances, outgrow
them, especially if they are not exposed to the
foods causing allergic reaction for a year or
two.
Some food allergies, however, are
there for the whole life. Allergies to peanuts,
nuts, shellfish, and fish are just a few classic
examples.
Milk and soy allergies are particularly
seen in infants and young kids. Usually, these
allergies do not result in hives and asthma, but
rather lead to colic, and possibly blood in the
stool or poor growth. Infants and children are
more likely to be susceptible to this allergic
syndrome because of the immaturity and weakness
of their immune and digestive systems.
Food allergies can be so severe that
even the slightest contact with the food results
in immediate itching, stinging, and/or inflammation
of the lips, tongue, and throat.
Milk or soy allergies can attack
an infant within days to months of birth. Sometimes
a family history of allergies or feeding problems
can be traced. Food
allergies might be identified or diagnosed
when withdrawing a food improves symptoms and
reintroducing the food bring back the same symptoms.
Eliminating the food causing the
allergy is the heart of treatment. This can prove
to be a hard task because some foods are included
as hidden ingredients in many other foods products.
Usually symptoms will get better significantly
within three days of eliminating the food that
causes them.
Allergy testing can also be useful. In infants, a positive
result is mostly indicates the presence of an
allergy, but a negative result does not give much
information either way. In preschool children,
the opposite is right. A negative result is a
good sign that a child is not allergic to the
food. A positive result, however, might or might
not suggest an allergy.
If the baby is on cow's milk, the
doctor might suggest a change to soy formula or
exclusive breast milk, if feasible in that case.
If soy formula causes an allergic reaction, the
baby may be suggested to stay on a basic formula.
These formulas include processed
proteins, basically sugars and amino acids. There
are hardly any allergens in these materials. The
doctors sometimes prescribe corticosteroids for
the treatment of infants with severe food allergies.
Time mostly heals this particular gastrointestinal
illness. It is likely to resolve within the first
few years of life.
Exclusive breast feeding, excluding
all other solid food items for infants for the
first six to twelve months of life is often suggested
to avoid milk or soy allergies from developing
within that time duration.
Such breast feeding often leads to
parents avoiding infant-feeding troubles, especially
if the parents are allergic; the infant is more
likely to be allergic. There are a few children
who are so sensitive to a particular food, however,
that if the food is taken by the mother, significant
quantities enter the breast milk to result in
a food reaction in the child. Mothers sometimes
must themselves stay away from those foods to
which the infant is allergic.
Breastfeeding can help avoid many
food allergies. This is particularly true if the
mother gives up some of the most allergic foods
like peanuts and perhaps milk or eggs. On the
positive side, mothers who take in beneficial
bacteria, as in yogurt, while pregnant and nursing
might help their kids in staying away from food
allergies.
After one suspects a food allergy,
a medical evaluation is the key to proper treatment.
Treatment basically involves avoiding the food
or foods after identification. People having children
with food allergies should become well-informed
about allergies and how they are treated, and
should work with their doctors.
It's significant for parents with
kids allergic to foods to identify them and to
avoid foods that cause allergic reactions. Some
foods can cause severe illness and, in some cases,
a life-threatening allergic reaction that can
block airways in the lungs, critically low blood
pressure, and cause suffocation by the swelling
of the tongue or inflammation of throat.
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