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Hello All,

Does anyone hear have any experience with IgA deficiency? We are having my 13

month old

daughter evaluated for this right now. Her symptoms included eczema from birth,

sensitivity to

gluten and dairy, lots of colds, and fungal problems. I have a cousin

who was recently diagnosed with IgA deficiency, and her doctor suggested

that all of us be tested. Eliana (my DD) recently had to go on fluconazole

because

she had almost a month long oral thrush infection which would not go away with

Nystatin.

She also had candida on her skin. I've started her on some Primal Defense. I

was wondering

if her blood test results might be skewed because she is breastfeeding? Would

the IgA she is

receiving from me show up in her blood?

Any wisdom concerning this condition would be appreciated...

Blessings,

Holly Whittemore

hwhittemore@...

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Yes Holly,

Anything that you are eating, drinking, and doing/being exposed to

will show up in your beastmilk, and therefore in the baby. I don't

know whether the results would be skewed because you are breastfeeding

though, since allergies " run in the family " . Have you eliminated the

things from your diet that she is allergic to? Have you considered

enviornmental allergies?

The last experience I had with that many medicines was when my dd was

a baby (now almost 12)... turned out that the problems all went away

when I refused to give her any more medicines (I had watched her get

worse with every stronger one the doctor tried.) That was my first

clue that she was chemically sensitive, although I didn't realize it

for another 5 years after that.

Are you replacing the intestinal flora that the drugs are killing off?

That will create a lot of those symptoms too. And then there is all of

the detoxing she will need to do to get the chemicals out (will

probably show up in the form of more eczema and colds). Are you seeing

a naturopathic doctor, or one that at least follows the WAP

principles? Conventional doctors are generally ignorant of the true

role of nutrition in health.

I hope you can find the answers that you are looking for, and can

solve your daughter's health problems. I wish you all the best luck,

and if you want more help in the nutrition/ drug free department, just

ask!

L.

>

> Does anyone hear have any experience with IgA deficiency? We are having my

> 13 month old

> daughter evaluated for this right now. Her symptoms included eczema from

> birth, sensitivity to

> gluten and dairy, lots of colds, and fungal problems. I have a cousin

> who was recently diagnosed with IgA deficiency, and her doctor suggested

> that all of us be tested. Eliana (my DD) recently had to go on fluconazole

> because

> she had almost a month long oral thrush infection which would not go away

> with Nystatin.

> She also had candida on her skin. I've started her on some Primal Defense.

> I was wondering

> if her blood test results might be skewed because she is breastfeeding?

> Would the IgA she is

> receiving from me show up in her blood?

>

> Any wisdom concerning this condition would be appreciated...

>

> Blessings,

> Holly Whittemore

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>Does anyone hear have any experience with IgA deficiency? We are having my 13

month old

>daughter evaluated for this right now. Her symptoms included eczema from

birth, sensitivity to

>gluten and dairy, lots of colds, and fungal problems.

I don't know much about it, but folks with gluten sensitivity have it more than

the general population. IgA is used to fight bacteria and viruses in the body,

so not having it makes it harder to fight off stuff.

http://www.primaryimmune.org/pubs/book_pats/e_ch04.pdf

This says 1 in 500 individuals is deficient in IgA ... but among gluten

intolerant folks, it's more like 3 in 100. Since gluten intolerance is

tested by testing the levels of IgA, those folks often don't get diagnosed.

But to date no one seems sure WHY the two are related.

Heidi Jean

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>>This says 1 in 500 individuals is deficient in IgA ... but among gluten

intolerant folks, it's more like 3 in 100. Since gluten intolerance is

tested by testing the levels of IgA, those folks often don't get diagnosed.

But to date no one seems sure WHY the two are related.<<

~~~Well, you seem to know more about it than I do. Are you saying that, if a

person does not have a deficiency of IgA, he won't be gluten intolerant? Or is

that too big a leap?

Carol

Heidi Jean

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>~~~Well, you seem to know more about it than I do. Are you saying that, if a

person does not have a deficiency of IgA, he won't be gluten intolerant? Or is

that too big a leap?

>Carol

No ... most gluten intolerant folks aren't IgA deficient. Just that more of them

are IgA deficient than other groups, which is an interesting " coincidence " .

Since gluten intolerance seems to trigger autoimmune disorders, and IgA defiency

seems to be an autoimmune disorder ... then gluten intolerance might trigger the

IgA deficiency. IF that is the case (and I don't know that it is) then there

might be hope ...

Heidi Jean

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