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Re: fish oil and hives

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Kathy--

I was there at the conference too, and can back you up entirely that

that was exactly what Dr. Agin said, just about word for word! (Don't

worry, it wasn't kindergarten level-- Dr. Agin put it that simply!)

le (mom to Drew, 2.11 yrs. apraxia, DSI and hypotonia)

> I would stop the ProEFA, too....but at the conference someone asked

a

> question about fish and babies.....about how we are not supposed to

start fish until

> whatever age....Dr. Agin said that as long as no fish allergies

were in the

> family that you could take alittle and rub it on your child's hand

and see if

> anything happens....then she said to put alittle on your childs lip

(correct me

> or Jeanne if I am incorrect, please!).....and if everything is

still OK

> then the supplement should also be ok........of course she used

better vocab,

> not my Kindergarten level...LOL...kathy

>

>

>

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Woman with a dissenting opinion here...

According to my pediatric allergist, a person passes the gene to be

allergic but NOT to what their offspring is/are allergic. For

instance, you could be allergic to ragweed, but your child could be

allergic to peanuts or penicillin. This goes against what Dr. Agin

said - that it should be ok if fish allergy doesn't run in your

family. Also, in terms of testing the oil on the skin, this could be

ok, but remember that some allergies take several exposures to create

a significant enough reaction to be seen. My son had peanut butter

and peanut products several times before reacting severely. The same

happened with the -cillins. Just be cautious. It's rare to be

severely allergic to foods, but it is on the rise in the US.

Actually having a reaction (like hives) would warrant stoppage of the

newly introduced substance and a trip to the allergist. In my house,

it also warrants a solid dose of Benedryl as a precaution!

Thanks for letting me post my opinion - it's obviously up to each

parent's judgement.

Thanks!

Marina

> I would stop the ProEFA, too....but at the conference someone asked

a

> question about fish and babies.....about how we are not supposed to

start fish until

> whatever age....Dr. Agin said that as long as no fish allergies

were in the

> family that you could take alittle and rub it on your child's hand

and see if

> anything happens....then she said to put alittle on your childs lip

(correct me

> or Jeanne if I am incorrect, please!).....and if everything is

still OK

> then the supplement should also be ok........of course she used

better vocab,

> not my Kindergarten level...LOL...kathy

>

>

>

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Guest guest

Marina, Im with you. My dad had a severe shellfish allergy, and I was very

scared even initiating fish oils with Jordan. I do think they somehow " follow "

the family, but may not and most likely don't surface in the same way....

just my 2 Cents worth......

~k

Marina wrote:

Woman with a dissenting opinion here...

According to my pediatric allergist, a person passes the gene to be

allergic but NOT to what their offspring is/are allergic. For

instance, you could be allergic to ragweed, but your child could be

allergic to peanuts or penicillin. This goes against what Dr. Agin

said - that it should be ok if fish allergy doesn't run in your

family. Also, in terms of testing the oil on the skin, this could be

ok, but remember that some allergies take several exposures to create

a significant enough reaction to be seen. My son had peanut butter

and peanut products several times before reacting severely. The same

happened with the -cillins. Just be cautious. It's rare to be

severely allergic to foods, but it is on the rise in the US.

Actually having a reaction (like hives) would warrant stoppage of the

newly introduced substance and a trip to the allergist. In my house,

it also warrants a solid dose of Benedryl as a precaution!

Thanks for letting me post my opinion - it's obviously up to each

parent's judgement.

Thanks!

Marina

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Guest guest

Hi-

Marina is correct, I believe. I am allergic to penicillin, but I

can give it to my children without breaking into hives. Why?

Because touching it is COMPLETELY different from ingesting it.

There are other substances that you can be topically (touching)

allergic to - like poison ivy - but you could smell it and be fine.

But if you are allergic to ragweed, the reaction is set of by

inhaling it.

Make sense? Different types of allergies - different mechanisms.

Touching your skin with something is not going to tell you if you

are allergic to digesting it.

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