Guest guest Posted October 10, 2006 Report Share Posted October 10, 2006 I also have a son with a severe peanut allergy. These kids with food allergies are more vulnerable and have immune systems that kick into overdrive when something considered " foreign " comes in. What lots of folks don't realize about food allergies is that you can eat the offending item several times before it causes a severe reaction. So they give their 2 year old peanut butter 2, 3 times and then on time #4, they get hives and worse. Another thing to note: the best allergists recommend that if you have a food allergy in your family that you hold off on the biggest offenders until the child is 5!!! That means no peanuts, tree nuts, eggs and shellfish until 5. Other items - like dairy, wheat and soy - should be introduced very carefully and watched. I cringe every time I see someone feeding their kid peanut butter at 2. Why? Because - in all likelihood - if I hadn't exposed my son to it so early, he wouldn't be allergic to it. Some kids - like ours - need a while to allow their immune systems to fully mature. Another thing to note: peanuts and treenuts are generally transported and processed in the same facilities. That's one of the main reasons why people allergic to one don't eat the other. All it takes is 1/10,000th of a peanut to cause anaphylactic shock. As for the rarity of food allergies, it's definitely on the rise. How much so no one really knows until the studies are produced several years later. I can tell you that we are in a VERY small district - perhaps 700 primary students in 3 different schools - and there are at least 9 epipen carrying kids that I know of (and we find each other pretty quickly). Even the pharmacists comment on how many more epipens they dole out now. Who really knows why - perhaps it's the environment, perhaps it's the increased amount of odd additives in topical products, perhaps it's the increased exposure to varieties of foods at an earlier age. My theory is a combination of all 3. Check the labels of the high-end baby products - many of them have peanut oil in them. Tide reportedly USED to use ground peanut shells in their powdered detergent to give it loft. I give them credit (if it's true) for being " green " but even now with the better labeling laws, they need not report it. Did you know that aquafresh toothpaste is not ok for peanut allergic folks? And dog biscuits? And the list goes on... Did you know that one of the fastest growing food allergies internationally is to sesame seeds - particularly in Asia? There must be some clues there. As for whether or not " our kids " with neuro-dev issues are more at risk, I believe they are. I belong to lots of lists and there's always a handful of us with kids with anaphylactic food responses. The ratio is too high for it to be a coincidence. Also, when I told my allergist's office that my son had special needs before coming in, they told me that a really high ratio of their patients are SN. My son who is allergic to peanuts has a communication disorder - not apraxia (that's my older son). Talk about vulnerable. We can't even explain it to him so he can self-regulate his own food because all he knows is that " peanuts will make me sick " - he doesn't have the understanding (yet) for us to go into detail. Nor could he tell me that his throat felt itchy or weird or anything for years. It was and remains very scary. Food allergies are nothing to mess with or downplay. A few signs to watch out for: 1. excema as an infant 2. frequent vomiting - particularly in restaurants as they get older. We left more restaurants in shame than I can tell you. unexplained hives 3. kids complaining that they " don't like " entire categories of foods. They know how it makes them feel. 4. Odd breathing patterns. I had my son in to several specialists at our local children's hospital - they even scoped him - because he had strange breathing patterns as an infant. Later, we took him to the ER 2x for hyperventilating for no reason. We were told that it was because there was alot going on at our house (it was 2 days before xmas). NOooooooooooooooooooooo - it was because he had eaten cookies my mom had made with traces of peanuts in them. He was having difficulty breathing. No one caught it. 5. having a family history of allergies - any allergies. Though it's known that food allergies run in families, it is also known that genetically, you pass on the gene to have an allergic response. WHAT you are allergic to is all based on exposure. So, you're allergic to ragweed...what will your child be allergic to? 6. an interesting question on allergist's questionaires: are there any incidents of unexplained infant/child mortality in your families? Sure enough, my grandmother had 12 children. 1 of them died from influenza, 3 live now, and the rest died as infants or in early childhood. None of them made it past 4, and most made it only to 1 or 2. My father - her 5th child - has a bizarre reaction to tree nuts - mostly walnuts - but his developed later in life. How did we finally learn? He pulled a peanut butter sandwich (his 2nd) apart and put it on his face. His eyes swelled shut and his lips blew up. My husband called the doctor's office and I gave him a HUGE dose of benedryl out of instinct. It saved his life. Don't mess with food allergies. It's a HELL of alot easier to keep them away from shrimp and PB & Js until they're 5 than it is to spend the rest of their lives grilling waitresses and fighting schools for proper accomodations. Believe me. > > > > I'm not debating that food allergies are on the rise -they could > > have gone from 1% of the population up a few points -but they are > > still rare. I do know that in all the years that my children have > > been in school -including preschool -there's only been one child > > that has been in my one son Dakota's kindergarten class with a > > severe food allergy to nuts which all of the parents in the class > > were made aware of so that we didn't send any foods into the school > > with nuts. (Dakota is now in 7th) > > > > Tanner in 1st grade had a child in his class who had severe > > allergies to bee stings and she needed to have an epipen with her > at > > all times -but not sure if that counts in food allergies. (Tanner > is > > now in 4th) > > > > By the US food and drug administration food allergies are > considered > > to be " rare but risky " > > " true food allergies affect a relatively small percentage of > people: > > Experts estimate that only 2 percent of adults, and from 2 to 8 > > percent of children, are truly allergic to certain foods. " > > http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/wh-alrg1.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2006 Report Share Posted October 25, 2006 , just to update you on our little guy's red bumps, since I did ask your help with them. After all this time, they are still coming and going. We saw the pediatrician again, and still he does not know what they are. They are not petechiae and there is no bruising. And the pediatrician says not to worry about them. Easier said than done, but like you said, since our son is otherwise happy and not bothered by it, mostly we are just observing them and hoping they will eventually disappear. Thank you so much, , for taking the time to answer my earlier query about the red bumps. I wanted to wait until after that next appointment to answer your question about whether they are petechiae. I thought not at the time but wanted to be sure before I replied to this. So again, thank you so very, very much. Suzanne [ ] Re: Vitamin E Do the red bumps disappear when you press on them? Does your pediatrician think they are petechiae??? This is probably the only thing I would worry about. Bruising as a sign of vit E effect from vitamin E (which you shouldn't see at the dose you are using). But ironically ph had chronic petechiae (red dots on his chest that would eventually fade to be replaced by more of them)...but they have gone away on vit E supplements. Petechiae is usually a sign of platelet problems (which prevent bleeding). Vit E is actually pretty important for normal platelet function. But not having seen the rash...I have no idea. It could be totally unrelated to the supplements. Many childhood rashes are the result of viruses. It could also be allergic to new clothes, detergent or soap etc. Is your pediatrician concerned? If the child is happy and not bothered by it, and its not bruising or petechiae... I wouldn't worry about it too much. -claudia > Having been evaluated as having several verbal and oral apraxia in > July, we started our son (who is 27 months old now) a few weeks later > on ProEFA and then three weeks after that began Vitamin E 400 IU with > 300 mg gamma. All this is, of course, thanks to this wonderful group > and all the invaluable information you provide. > > Then all of a sudden, we were surprised to see some red bumps, like > pimples,I guess, on his chest. And you know how it goes, you get that > awful lump in your throat and you are thinking, oh, no, what next. > This started about 6 weeks after we first began the ProEFA and about > 2½ weeks after starting him on Vitamin E. The bumps began to fade, > and we thought that was the end of it and were so relieved. Then more > started to appear in different areas of his chest. They, too, began > to fade until it looked again like this was clearing up. Now with > most of the earlier bumps gone, he is getting a few more again. > > They don't itch. They aren't hives—his pediatrician doesn't know what > is causing them. They don't burst. > > We can't imagine what is causing them. The only new things in his > life are the ProEFA and the Vitamin E, so naturally we are wondering > if it could be related to one of those. Since we doubled the ProEFA 2 > weeks ago and didn't see any increase in the bumps, we are kind of > thinking it must not be the ProEFA. > > I know you are so busy, , but with all your expertise on > Vitamin E, I am wondering if you know of any side effects or > conditions caused by Vitamin E, either too much or too little, that > sound anything at all like this. He hasn't been on it all that long. > I wonder, also, if it could be due to some other ingredient in the > Vitamin E. > > Strange symptoms of something, and it is so worrisome, as the bumps > shouldn't be there. And strange that they come and go. I worry that > they are a sign of something else going wrong somewhere in his little > body. I have to admit that when I saw those first bumps, trying to > figure out what in the world they could be, that I even wondered if it > might be chickenpox. This all started about 2½ weeks ago. > > Has anyone else had anything like this happen? With all that > knowledge in this group I'm hoping that maybe someone has some ideas > about this. > > I know this sounds so weird. I wish the bumps would just go away. I > didn't want to bother anyone with this problem. I know it is so > trivial compared to the many real problems that our kids have. But > they keep coming back, and they do worry me, so I finally had to post > this to see if anyone has any answers. > > Thanks so much for your help. > Suzanne > <!-- #ygrp-mlmsg {font-size:13px;font-family:arial,helvetica,clean,sans-serif;} #ygrp-mlmsg table {font-size:inherit;font:100%;} #ygrp-mlmsg select, input, textarea {font:99% arial,helvetica,clean,sans-serif;} #ygrp-mlmsg pre, code {font:115% monospace;} #ygrp-mlmsg * {line-height:1.22em;} #ygrp-text{ font-family:Georgia; } #ygrp-text p{ margin:0 0 1em 0; } #ygrp-tpmsgs{ font-family:Arial; clear:both; } #ygrp-vitnav{ padding-top:10px; font-family:Verdana; font-size:77%; margin:0; } #ygrp-vitnav a{ padding:0 1px; } #ygrp-actbar{ clear:both; margin:25px 0; white-space:nowrap; color:#666; text-align:right; } #ygrp-actbar .left{ float:left; white-space:nowrap; } ..bld{font-weight:bold;} #ygrp-grft{ font-family:Verdana; font-size:77%; padding:15px 0; } #ygrp-ft{ font-family:verdana; font-size:77%; border-top:1px solid #666; padding:5px 0; } #ygrp-mlmsg #logo{ padding-bottom:10px; } #ygrp-vital{ background-color:#e0ecee; margin-bottom:20px; padding:2px 0 8px 8px; } #ygrp-vital #vithd{ font-size:77%; font-family:Verdana; font-weight:bold; color:#333; text-transform:uppercase; } #ygrp-vital ul{ padding:0; margin:2px 0; } #ygrp-vital ul li{ list-style-type:none; clear:both; border:1px solid #e0ecee; } #ygrp-vital ul li .ct{ font-weight:bold; color:#ff7900; float:right; width:2em; text-align:right; padding-right:.5em; } #ygrp-vital ul li .cat{ font-weight:bold; } #ygrp-vital a { text-decoration:none; } #ygrp-vital a:hover{ text-decoration:underline; } #ygrp-sponsor #hd{ color:#999; font-size:77%; } #ygrp-sponsor #ov{ padding:6px 13px; background-color:#e0ecee; margin-bottom:20px; } #ygrp-sponsor #ov ul{ padding:0 0 0 8px; margin:0; } #ygrp-sponsor #ov li{ list-style-type:square; padding:6px 0; font-size:77%; } #ygrp-sponsor #ov li a{ text-decoration:none; font-size:130%; } #ygrp-sponsor #nc { background-color:#eee; margin-bottom:20px; padding:0 8px; } #ygrp-sponsor .ad{ padding:8px 0; } #ygrp-sponsor .ad #hd1{ font-family:Arial; font-weight:bold; color:#628c2a; font-size:100%; line-height:122%; } #ygrp-sponsor .ad a{ text-decoration:none; } #ygrp-sponsor .ad a:hover{ text-decoration:underline; } #ygrp-sponsor .ad p{ margin:0; } o {font-size:0;} ..MsoNormal { margin:0 0 0 0; } #ygrp-text tt{ font-size:120%; } blockquote{margin:0 0 0 4px;} ..replbq {margin:4;} --> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2007 Report Share Posted August 7, 2007 I have not heard of the Vitamin E supplement until I joined this group. I understand how the fish oil works but not this. My son who is 2 1/2 and non-verbal is on 1 capsule of the NN Pro Efa. How much and what brand is suggested of Vitamin E. I read one post about a child who it seemed to help the sensory issues. That would be very helpful. --------------------------------- Moody friends. Drama queens. Your life? Nope! - their life, your story. Play Sims Stories at Games. --------------------------------- Shape in your own image. Join our Network Research Panel today! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2007 Report Share Posted August 7, 2007 I think any good quality brand is OK, but get natural E, not synthetic. d-alpha is natural, but dl-alpha is synthetic. Tricky! We use 100% Natural 400IU Vitamin E and High Gamma Tocopherols, both from Vitamin World. We take one of each at breakfast and again at dinner. We had TONS of extra sensory issues upon introduction, but they went away after a week or two. For us, it's hard to say if the Vitamin E is working. My son's motor skills have definitely improved since starting the E, but that may be from similar increases in fish oil, or therapy, or maturity, or something else entirely. It is so hard to isolate! Our listmate is the one who made the vitamin E discovery and is trying to get funding for a study. Until that happens, we won't know why it works for some and not others, what the proper dosage is, etc. It's trial-and-error time. There are probably archives that describe it better. Use and Vitamin E as search terms. in NJ > > I have not heard of the Vitamin E supplement until I joined this group. I understand how the fish oil works but not this. My son who is 2 1/2 and non-verbal is on 1 capsule of the NN Pro Efa. How much and what brand is suggested of Vitamin E. I read one post about a child who it seemed to help the sensory issues. That would be very helpful. > > > > --------------------------------- > Moody friends. Drama queens. Your life? Nope! - their life, your story. > Play Sims Stories at Games. > > --------------------------------- > Shape in your own image. Join our Network Research Panel today! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2007 Report Share Posted August 7, 2007 From " Healing the New Childhood Epidemics " (which is a great reference for supplements and what they do) Vit E - is an important antioxidant - makes B-12 more effective in removing toxins from the body - boosts sulfation (which is a detoxification process the body uses) - helps prevent EFAs from being oxidized - helps restore damaged cells in the liver (an organ that helps remove toxins) - helps protect against the damage done by saturated and oxidized fats - reduces susceptibility of children to neuromuscular diseases - helps boost immunity Kim bigcheech91 <bigcheech91@...> wrote: I think any good quality brand is OK, but get natural E, not synthetic. d-alpha is natural, but dl-alpha is synthetic. Tricky! We use 100% Natural 400IU Vitamin E and High Gamma Tocopherols, both from Vitamin World. We take one of each at breakfast and again at dinner. We had TONS of extra sensory issues upon introduction, but they went away after a week or two. For us, it's hard to say if the Vitamin E is working. My son's motor skills have definitely improved since starting the E, but that may be from similar increases in fish oil, or therapy, or maturity, or something else entirely. It is so hard to isolate! Our listmate is the one who made the vitamin E discovery and is trying to get funding for a study. Until that happens, we won't know why it works for some and not others, what the proper dosage is, etc. It's trial-and-error time. There are probably archives that describe it better. Use and Vitamin E as search terms. in NJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2007 Report Share Posted August 7, 2007 Yes, I agree with that you should do a search for and Vitamin E to learn all you can about it. 's first post about the benefits she saw in her son is message #50746. We are one of the families that were blessed that Vitamin E did help our child - and there is no question for us that it is the Vitamin E helping. Some have dramatic changes like we did. Others have more subtle changes. You can search on " fkewatson " messages to see our stories. > > > > I have not heard of the Vitamin E supplement until I joined this > group. I understand how the fish oil works but not this. My son who > is 2 1/2 and non-verbal is on 1 capsule of the NN Pro Efa. How much > and what brand is suggested of Vitamin E. I read one post about a > child who it seemed to help the sensory issues. That would be very > helpful. > > > > > > > > --------------------------------- > > Moody friends. Drama queens. Your life? Nope! - their life, your > story. > > Play Sims Stories at Games. > > > > --------------------------------- > > Shape in your own image. Join our Network Research Panel > today! > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2007 Report Share Posted August 7, 2007 Hi : Here is the Vitamin E information that is in the links section. Hope you find this information helpful, Tina EFAs and Vitamin E Archived message: Scroll to the bottom for answers to frequently asked questions about Vitamin E. /message/52516 Information to start vitamin E Information re: doses and which kind of Vitamin E to use /message/55922 Linus ing Institute at Oregon State University Information on Vitamin E, function, and dieficiency http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocenter/vitamins/vitaminE/ Question about Vitamin E in ProEFA Answer from Dr. Marilyn Agin /message/20612 The beginning of vitamin E 's first message about her discovery of vitamin E helping her son with global apraxia/dyspraxia /message/50746 Upper limits of Vitamin E Archived message: 's response to this question - Children's safe vitamin E levels-where did you find? /message/56893 Vitamin E Info Archived message: This post has a lot of information all put into one message that you would find in several archived messages on Vitamin E. /message/63144 Vitamin E and Behavior Archived message: Changes you may see in behavior using vitamin E. /message/53049 Vitamin E and Omega Info Archived message: Answer to doses for omegas and vitamin E, how omegas and vitamin E help with speech, symptoms of vitamin E deficiency that overlap with symptoms of apraxia. /message/52976 Vitamin K High doses of Vitamin E can effect Vitamin K. Information on adding Vitamin K. /message/54249 > > I have not heard of the Vitamin E supplement until I joined this group. I understand how the fish oil works but not this. My son who is 2 1/2 and non-verbal is on 1 capsule of the NN Pro Efa. How much and what brand is suggested of Vitamin E. I read one post about a child who it seemed to help the sensory issues. That would be very helpful. > > > > --------------------------------- > Moody friends. Drama queens. Your life? Nope! - their life, your story. > Play Sims Stories at Games. > > --------------------------------- > Shape in your own image. Join our Network Research Panel today! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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