Many children, especially those with eczema, are unnecessarily avoiding foods based on incomplete information about potential food-allergies, according to researchers at National Jewish Health. The food avoidance poses a nutritional risk for these children, and is often based primarily on data from blood tests known as serum immunoassays.
Many factors, including patient and family history, physical examination, and blood and skin tests, should be used when evaluating potential food allergies. The oral food challenge, in which patients consume the suspected allergenic food, is the gold standard test.
The researchers conducted a retrospective chart review of 125 children evaluated at National Jewish Health for suspected food allergies. Depending on the reason for food avoidance, 84 percent to 93 percent of foods being avoided were restored to their diets after an oral food challenge. The researchers published their study online in The Journal of Pediatrics on Oct. 29. It will appear in a later print version of the journal. “People with known food allergies, especially those with a history of anaphylactic reactions, should by all means avoid those foods,” said David Fleischer, MD, lead author of the study and Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at National Jewish Health. “However, a growing number of patients referred to our practice are being placed on strict, unproven food-elimination diets that have led to poor weight gain and malnutrition. These overly restrictive diets have been chosen for a variety of reasons, but overreliance on immunoassay tests appears to be the most common cause.”
Immunoassays detect antibodies in the blood to specific foods, which can potentially cause allergic reactions. Interpretation of the results, however, can be tricky. The tests’ ability to predict true food allergy has been validated for only five foods – cow’s milk, hen egg, fish, peanut and tree nuts.
For all other foods, the numbers derived from lab testing are suggestive but not definitive. Low test values suggest that a child’s immune system is sensitized to the food, but not necessarily to the extent that it will cause an allergic reaction. Higher values suggest an increasingly likelihood of true food allergy. None of the tests are 100 percent accurate, however, in predicting clinical food allergy on their own.
National Jewish Health physicians use blood tests as one piece of evidence in their comprehensive evaluation of food allergy. They also carefully evaluate a patient’s history, including any previous reactions to food, the type of reaction, the patient’s age, and the result of skin testing for food allergy. They generally perform an oral food challenge when the evidence is mixed and they want a definitive answer to the food allergy question.
Children in the study were avoiding 177 different foods based primarily on previous blood test results. In many cases, especially those with high test results for egg, milk, shellfish, peanut and tree nut, National Jewish Health elected not to perform oral food challenges. They did perform oral food challenges for 71 foods or about 40 percent of the cases where the clinical allergy was equivocal and it was important to determine whether or not the patient had food allergy. In 86 percent of those cases, the child passed the food challenge and the food was restored to the child’s diet. Overall, 66 of the 177 foods avoided because of blood tests were restored to children’s diets. For the entire study, 325 foods were restored to the diets of 125 children.
“When you are able to restore foods such as dairy products, egg, peanut, wheat, and vegetables to a child’s diet, it improves their nutrition, reduces the need for expensive substitute foods and makes meal time easier for families,” said Donald Leung, MD, PhD, senior author and Edelstein Chair of Pediatric Allergy and Clinical Immunology at National Jewish Health.
The problem can be especially acute among patients with eczema, also known as atopic dermatitis. Research suggests that specific foods can cause flare-ups in about one third of eczema patients. They commonly have high immunoassay tests to a variety of foods, many of which are not truly allergenic. As a result, many mistakenly avoid foods they believe are causing flare-ups, but neglect basic skin care that is vital to improving the eczema. One hundred and twenty of the 125 children in the study had eczema.
This is good info! Where else can if ind out more?? Who runs this joint too? Keep up the good work 🙂
I am just going to have to concur with you on this one!
These are some great points!
Great post I must say.. Simple but yet interesting and engaging.. Keep up the awesome work!
Wonderful blog! I saw it at Google and I must say that entries are well thought of. I will be coming back to see more posts soon.
i truly liked your web site, and now have received a great deal of expertise around the subject. we’ve a new website inside identical specialized niche. thanks for all your details. i apologize regarding the terrible english, i’m coming from belgium.
Hi, What can I take for this horrible heartburn I have? OH MY GOD… replica pens It feels like the baby has lit my intestines on fire! It is horrible, even tea, water, like when I drink water and burp the water comes back up, it is horrible. The heartburn is the worst, it hurts so bad! What do you girls take for heartburn while pregnant that works for sure? help will be greatly appreciated!!!!
That’s awesome!!!!! You got a good internship! the fact that you enjoy your work you will least likely fall into what other call “burn-out”. You see your internship as natural process of learning and replica watches that was very great! However, if that experience doesn’t turn as job opportunity don’t think of it as invaluable for your future because that learning can be used in many ways;)
I don’t agree with you that such internship you’ve experienced replica watches paypal will be invaluable for your future if it will not turn out into a real career. You’re enjoying now and learning more of what you’re doing. So, it benefits you a lot. Thanks for sharing your story.
Greetings. I really did some web surfing and found this blog. I decided by way of this blog put up and it is really incredible.I definitely genuinely enjoy your website.Perfectly, the chunk of posting is in guarantee the very finest on this genuinely worth though subject. I added it and i’m hunting ahead to your upcoming site reports. I also observed that your website has some excellent connecting completed to it. I will correct apart get hold of your rss feed to stay informed of any revisions. Wonderful information you received right here.Delight maintain revise on your fantastic article.Thanks.
Thank you for this wonderful method around the topic. Also, I would like to share a website that I found to get some great guidance regarding ADD Symptoms in Children. I found it clean and quite dependable information when I was looking for ADHD. I was also searching for the ADD Test Online to aid examine my kid.
by Lena Butler, the author of Test Country Articles a longer version of this article is located at All You Need to Know About Eating Right For Your Genotype, and resources from other home health and wellness testing articles are used such as Genetic