New guidelines: Introduce peanuts to infants early to prevent allergies

By Rob Goodier (Reuters Health) – Parents may be able to reduce the chance that their children will develop peanut allergies by introducing the food early on, as young as four to six months of age, experts now say. The timing and method should depend on the infant’s risk of a peanut allergy, according to doctors who presented a preview of updated guidelines today in San Francisco at the annual meeting of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. “Guidance regarding when to introduce peanut into the diet of an infant is changing, based on new research that shows that early introduction around 4-6 months of life, after a few other foods have been introduced into the infant’s diet, is associated with a significantly reduced risk of such infants developing peanut allergy,” said Dr. Matthew Greenhawt, a pediatrician and co-director of the Food Challenge and Research Unit at Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora, Colorado, who coauthored the update.

View full post on Health News Headlines – Yahoo News

Protection against peanut allergy persists even after peanuts stopped

By Gene Emery (Reuters Health) – The technique of feeding peanuts to infants and young children who might be allergic not only protects them from a serious reaction immediately, but that protection persists even after the children stop eating peanut products, according to a new British study. The results were released at Friday’s annual meeting of American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology in Los Angeles one year after the researchers demonstrated for the first time that eating peanuts in infancy cut the risk of peanut allergies by 80 percent. “We wanted to make sure these children wouldn’t rebound and develop a peanut allergy” if the peanut therapy stopped.

View full post on Health News Headlines – Yahoo News

Many Kids With Asthma Also Sensitive to Peanuts: Study – WebMD


TIME

Many Kids With Asthma Also Sensitive to Peanuts: Study
WebMD
"Many of the respiratory symptoms of peanut allergy can mirror those of an asthma attack, and vice versa. Examples of those symptoms include shortness of breath, wheezing and coughing," said the study lead author, Dr. Robert Cohn from Mercy Children's …
The Connection Between Peanut Allergies and AsthmaTIME
Children with Asthma May Have Peanut AllergiesLive Science
Nut allergy tests urged for childrenToledo Blade
Newser –Medical Daily
all 73 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Black kids twice as likely to have food sensitivities to peanuts, eggs, milk – msnbc.com

Black kids twice as likely to have food sensitivities to peanuts, eggs, milk
msnbc.com
"We know that sensitization is not the same thing as food allergy, but what they're reporting does seem to be consistent with what has been seen in other populations," said Christine Joseph, an allergy and asthma researcher from the Henry Ford Health

and more »

View full post on asthma – Google News

A few peanuts killed my Sarah, but her death has saved thousands – Daily Mail


Daily Mail

A few peanuts killed my Sarah, but her death has saved thousands
Daily Mail
She suffered from eczema as a toddler and asthma for most of her life but we had no idea about food allergies. Occasionally she reported a strange feeling
Schools Saying No to NutsPatch
Food allergies keeps families on edgeAppleton Post Crescent

all 3 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News