Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . When infants are tested for peanut allergies, parents feel anxious — and parents of infants who are sensitized ...
Food allergies can be scary. Here’s how to reduce your baby’s risk, understand allergy tests and respond to a reaction if it happens. Credit...Angie Wang Supported by By Alice Callahan This guide was ...
When infants have allergy symptoms, it’s important to discuss them with a pediatrician because the history and timing of the symptoms can help determine the cause. Be sure to keep track of your ...
International guidelines developed to help nonspecialists diagnose cow's milk allergy (CMA) lead providers to attribute normal infant symptoms to CMA and result in overdiagnosis, say authors of a ...
Researchers have found a link between infant food allergy and asthma and reduced lung function in later childhood. They say their findings can help healthcare professionals to be more vigilant around ...
As always, speak to your doctor too. More than 6 million Americans live with a peanut allergy. And that number is on the rise. As the National Institutes of Health (NIH) noted, "The prevalence of ...
CMPA should be differentiated from other diagnoses, including allergic reactions to other foods (e.g., eggs, soy, and wheat) or environmental substances, infection, anatomic abnormalities, metabolic ...
This article was originally published on Undark. For Taylor Arnold, a registered dietitian nutritionist, feeding her second baby was not easy. At eight weeks old, he screamed when he ate and wouldn’t ...
UBC researchers demonstrated in 2019 that pre-schoolers can safely overcome peanut allergies with a treatment called oral immunotherapy. Now they have evidence that the earlier pre-schoolers start ...
Changes to food allergy guidelines has led to a 16 per cent decrease in peanut allergy among infants, according to new study. Changes to food allergy guidelines has led to a 16 per cent decrease in ...