Guest guest Posted February 15, 2008 Report Share Posted February 15, 2008 /message/65336 There was question about eliminating milk and how you would know if this was an issue for your child? I did some searches on potential reasons why one would eliminate milk from a child's diet. Here is the links and information I gathered. Hope it helps, Tina Children prone to ear infections: http://surefoodsliving.com/2007/07/16/ear-infections-and-milk/ So, back to ear infections. According to pediatrician Dr. Greene, " Of the kids who are prone to ear infections (about 1/3 of kids), allergies are the underlying cause about 1/3 of the time. Cow's milk is the most likely non-airborne culprit. Presumably, it causes inflammation of the Eustachian tubes — the tubes that normally keep the ears clean and drained. It can also change the nature of the secretions. " Ears and allergies http://www.thenewhomemaker.com/earinfections *Allergic Causes* Otitis media is commonly associated with colds. Since colds and allergies can have the same physical effects on the ears and nasal passages, many experts suggest that allergies are the culprit behind some cases of otitis media. If a food allergy is suspected, eliminating milk and milk products, chocolate, tomatoes and tomato products, citrus, sugar, wheat, and/or eggs from your child's diet may be helpful. Information on milk allergy and milk intolerance http://www.allergysa.org/milk.htm Milk contains many protein fractions (allergens) that cause allergic reactions. The two main components are whey and casein, and an individual may be allergic to either or both. The casein is the curd that forms when milk is left to sour, and the whey is the watery fraction which is left after the curd is removed. http://www.asehaqld.org.au/Leaflets/is_it_really_milk_allergy.htm Information on Milk allergy, milk intolerance, and lactose intolerance. Information on symptoms of milk allergy or intolerance. http://www.askdrsears.com/html/3/T032100.asp The protein in cow's milk is what provokes the allergies. Because milk is a species-specific protein, cow's milk is suited to bovine intestines. Exposure of human intestines to bovine protein may cause irritation and damage to the intestinal lining, allowing these allergenic proteins to be absorbed into the circulatory system. The immune system recognizes these proteins as foreign and attacks them, causing the usual allergy symptoms of wheezing, runny nose, or a red, rough, sandpaper-like rash, especially on the cheeks. Milk allergies are often the underlying cause of repeated colds and ear infections, due to fluid building up in the respiratory passages, sinuses, and eustachian tubes of the ears. Milk allergy has been implicated in subtle behavioral changes, such as irritability and nightwaking. There are degrees of lactose intolerance, depending on the supply of lactase in the gut. Some children and adults can tolerate one glass of milk, but not two or three; or they can drink milk with a meal, but not separately on an empty stomach. Many can tolerate yogurt and cheese, but not milk as a beverage. (The lactose in fermented yogurt is somewhat predigested.) Lactose intolerance is more common than allergy to the protein in milk. Allergic symptoms usually involve the skin and respiratory systems, whereas lactose intolerance is limited to abdominal symptoms. Behavior and allergies http://borntoexplore.org/allergies.htm Can Allergies Cause Behavior Problems? Asthma and allergy symptoms http://www.newstarget.com/010443.html In Get Healthy Now, Professor Null explains a milk allergy's changing symptoms: " Even if the symptoms are not the same, the underlying allergy may be. A child who has suffered milk-associated asthma, for instance, may have severe acne as a teenager. The milk allergy is still there, but its symptoms have moved to a different organ system, often misleading the patient and physician into thinking that the original allergy has been outgrown. " According to Alternative Medicine, up to half of all infants may be sensitive to cows' milk. As a result, symptoms of an underlying milk allergy may start as early as infancy, only manifested as eczema, a symptom that may remain later on in childhood and adulthood. Furthermore, in addition to asthma and eczema, an underlying milk allergy may manifest as bronchitis, sinusitis, autoimmune disorders, frequent colds and ear infections and even behavioral problems. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2008 Report Share Posted February 15, 2008 The Gang at NACD ask anyone with a child with any type of auditory processing issues to do a milk elimination trial as well as to get tympanograms on a regular basis to determine causation. Our children did not end up without the ability to 'hear' for no reason. To reiterate the thoughtful piece below, the most common cause of an non-airborne allergen or intolerance with may affect the Ears, nose & throat is cows milk. Ask any ENT! Now, 3 years ago before I became enlightened about auditory processing, I would have said this: " My child doesn't have hearing issues, I have taken him to the audiologist many times and he has always passed the test with flying colours! " Yes, my child ALWAYS passed the tests but in reality, he couldn't hear everything he should have been hearing. The audiologist screening is just that.... a screening. I believe someone on this board posted that the English language is based on over 10,000 tones and there is no way that an audiologist tests for this. This is why so many of our children have seen such success with programs such as The Listening Program (TLP) or other auditory integration programs. One quick way to tell if your child has some type of auditory processing issues is by testing them with digit spans. Here is a link to an article that explains digit spans and how to test. Look specifically at auditory digit spans. If you have any questions, please ask the board since there are many of us who do digit spans with older kids or sequences with younger kids to work their auditory memories. http://www.nacd.org/more_information/journal/learninghow.html If your child not performing the digit spans or sequences according to his/her age level, then you should be seeing a red flag! There is a problem and you need to find out why. Your child is not 'processing' auditory information as he/she should and the underlying cause is the root to remediation! Now, quite often that cause stems from 2 sources: a physical problem with the ears or an environmental problem with the ears. Any physical problems with the ears should be addressed by an ENT. An environmental problem with the ears indicates congestion of some type. Congestion can result from infection or it can result from an allergen or an intolerance. I know of no other methods that cause congestion to the ears. If anyone else does, they can chime in here. If you have chronic congestion resulting from infections, your ENT will probably suggest Tubes. This should be suggested as the child is now at a point of becoming permanently developmentally delayed as result inadequate hearing. If you have experiences with ear infections of more than 3 in a year, tubes should really be considered. If you have congestion that is not from infection, then this is indicative of an allergen or intolerance that the child is exposed to. You need to find it and GET RID of IT! This may be inconvenient but believe me.... it is far more inconvenient to have a developmentally delayed child; particularly one that has lost the ability to follow instructions in a school room, drools all of the time, falls all of the time because his vestibular network has been compromised, etc. etc. For many of our children milk sensitivities are a ROOT CAUSE for a lot of problems. Those problems do not go away until the cause of all the trouble is removed. We have learned a lot in the last 10 years and I hope that we have made some progress that future generations can benefit from. Those of us who have milk compromised children will tell you..... things don't get better until you remove the intolerance! I did well over 10 years of therapy with few gains.... please do not go down my pathway without at least investigating this possible issue with your child. Yes, a special diet can be a pain in the neck but if your child begins to get better, you do see its worth. So.... If ALL of our children have speech issues and possibly as much as 50-80% have auditory processing issues, would it not make sense to perform a milk trial to just see if this could be a cause of your child's issues? In particular if your child has poor auditory memory and sequencing, it is absolutely worth the 3 weeks of milk deprivation, imo! Personally, if it is the root cause of your child's auditory issues, it is the most beneficial 3 weeks you will ever have spent. If it is not the cause of your childs auditory issues, then you can pencil it off the list and move on to the next item that you need to investigate. But at least you will know! This is the last I want to say of this subject. I feel well qualified to speak here as my son is one of those who did NOT get better until we removed the intolerance. I gave the therapy plenty of time to kick in..... 10 years of continuous therapy to be exact! The improvements were minimal until we dropped the milk. My son was told he would be in special education 'forever'. With the home program that NACD supplied, we eliminated milk and within a year he reentered the regular classroom. No vitamin E, and no fish oils during this period. Today, it really doesn't matter which vitamins I give him.... if I give the child milk or ice-cream, he is quite ill.... period. No exceptions. So.... had I just continued on without trying this, my child would have been handicapped forever. I am so glad that we are delving deeper and determining how to truly make him better medically as well as getting better therapy that is specifically directed towards his needs. I'm running out of time. I trusted the 'traditional' approach for too long and it did nothing but let me down. Janice Mother of Mark, 13 [sPAM][ ] Reasons to eliminate milk /message/65336 There was question about eliminating milk and how you would know if this was an issue for your child? I did some searches on potential reasons why one would eliminate milk from a child's diet. Here is the links and information I gathered. Hope it helps, Tina Children prone to ear infections: http://surefoodsliving.com/2007/07/16/ear-infections-and-milk/ So, back to ear infections. According to pediatrician Dr. Greene, " Of the kids who are prone to ear infections (about 1/3 of kids), allergies are the underlying cause about 1/3 of the time. Cow's milk is the most likely non-airborne culprit. Presumably, it causes inflammation of the Eustachian tubes - the tubes that normally keep the ears clean and drained. It can also change the nature of the secretions. " Ears and allergies http://www.thenewhomemaker.com/earinfections *Allergic Causes* Otitis media is commonly associated with colds. Since colds and allergies can have the same physical effects on the ears and nasal passages, many experts suggest that allergies are the culprit behind some cases of otitis media. If a food allergy is suspected, eliminating milk and milk products, chocolate, tomatoes and tomato products, citrus, sugar, wheat, and/or eggs from your child's diet may be helpful. Information on milk allergy and milk intolerance http://www.allergysa.org/milk.htm Milk contains many protein fractions (allergens) that cause allergic reactions. The two main components are whey and casein, and an individual may be allergic to either or both. The casein is the curd that forms when milk is left to sour, and the whey is the watery fraction which is left after the curd is removed. http://www.asehaqld.org.au/Leaflets/is_it_really_milk_allergy.htm Information on Milk allergy, milk intolerance, and lactose intolerance. Information on symptoms of milk allergy or intolerance. http://www.askdrsears.com/html/3/T032100.asp The protein in cow's milk is what provokes the allergies. Because milk is a species-specific protein, cow's milk is suited to bovine intestines. Exposure of human intestines to bovine protein may cause irritation and damage to the intestinal lining, allowing these allergenic proteins to be absorbed into the circulatory system. The immune system recognizes these proteins as foreign and attacks them, causing the usual allergy symptoms of wheezing, runny nose, or a red, rough, sandpaper-like rash, especially on the cheeks. Milk allergies are often the underlying cause of repeated colds and ear infections, due to fluid building up in the respiratory passages, sinuses, and eustachian tubes of the ears. Milk allergy has been implicated in subtle behavioral changes, such as irritability and nightwaking. There are degrees of lactose intolerance, depending on the supply of lactase in the gut. Some children and adults can tolerate one glass of milk, but not two or three; or they can drink milk with a meal, but not separately on an empty stomach. Many can tolerate yogurt and cheese, but not milk as a beverage. (The lactose in fermented yogurt is somewhat predigested.) Lactose intolerance is more common than allergy to the protein in milk. Allergic symptoms usually involve the skin and respiratory systems, whereas lactose intolerance is limited to abdominal symptoms. Behavior and allergies http://borntoexplore.org/allergies.htm Can Allergies Cause Behavior Problems? Asthma and allergy symptoms http://www.newstarget.com/010443.html In Get Healthy Now, Professor Null explains a milk allergy's changing symptoms: " Even if the symptoms are not the same, the underlying allergy may be. A child who has suffered milk-associated asthma, for instance, may have severe acne as a teenager. The milk allergy is still there, but its symptoms have moved to a different organ system, often misleading the patient and physician into thinking that the original allergy has been outgrown. " According to Alternative Medicine, up to half of all infants may be sensitive to cows' milk. As a result, symptoms of an underlying milk allergy may start as early as infancy, only manifested as eczema, a symptom that may remain later on in childhood and adulthood. Furthermore, in addition to asthma and eczema, an underlying milk allergy may manifest as bronchitis, sinusitis, autoimmune disorders, frequent colds and ear infections and even behavioral problems. 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Guest guest Posted February 15, 2008 Report Share Posted February 15, 2008 You Rock, Janice! This is great info. Charlie had tons of ear infections, tubes and now without milk he is PRESENT and chatting up a storm. Re: [ ] Reasons to eliminate milk The Gang at NACD ask anyone with a child with any type of auditory processing issues to do a milk elimination trial as well as to get tympanograms on a regular basis to determine causation. Our children did not end up without the ability to 'hear' for no reason. To reiterate the thoughtful piece below, the most common cause of an non-airborne allergen or intolerance with may affect the Ears, nose & throat is cows milk. Ask any ENT! Now, 3 years ago before I became enlightened about auditory processing, I would have said this: " My child doesn't have hearing issues, I have taken him to the audiologist many times and he has always passed the test with flying colours! " Yes, my child ALWAYS passed the tests but in reality, he couldn't hear everything he should have been hearing. The audiologist screening is just that.... a screening. I believe someone on this board posted that the English language is based on over 10,000 tones and there is no way that an audiologist tests for this. This is why so many of our children have seen such success with programs such as The Listening Program (TLP) or other auditory integration programs. One quick way to tell if your child has some type of auditory processing issues is by testing them with digit spans. Here is a link to an article that explains digit spans and how to test. Look specifically at auditory digit spans. If you have any questions, please ask the board since there are many of us who do digit spans with older kids or sequences with younger kids to work their auditory memories. http://www.nacd. <http://www.nacd.org/more_information/journal/learninghow.html> org/more_information/journal/learninghow.html If your child not performing the digit spans or sequences according to his/her age level, then you should be seeing a red flag! There is a problem and you need to find out why. Your child is not 'processing' auditory information as he/she should and the underlying cause is the root to remediation! Now, quite often that cause stems from 2 sources: a physical problem with the ears or an environmental problem with the ears. Any physical problems with the ears should be addressed by an ENT. An environmental problem with the ears indicates congestion of some type. Congestion can result from infection or it can result from an allergen or an intolerance. I know of no other methods that cause congestion to the ears. If anyone else does, they can chime in here. If you have chronic congestion resulting from infections, your ENT will probably suggest Tubes. This should be suggested as the child is now at a point of becoming permanently developmentally delayed as result inadequate hearing. If you have experiences with ear infections of more than 3 in a year, tubes should really be considered. If you have congestion that is not from infection, then this is indicative of an allergen or intolerance that the child is exposed to. You need to find it and GET RID of IT! This may be inconvenient but believe me.... it is far more inconvenient to have a developmentally delayed child; particularly one that has lost the ability to follow instructions in a school room, drools all of the time, falls all of the time because his vestibular network has been compromised, etc. etc. For many of our children milk sensitivities are a ROOT CAUSE for a lot of problems. Those problems do not go away until the cause of all the trouble is removed. We have learned a lot in the last 10 years and I hope that we have made some progress that future generations can benefit from. Those of us who have milk compromised children will tell you..... things don't get better until you remove the intolerance! I did well over 10 years of therapy with few gains.... please do not go down my pathway without at least investigating this possible issue with your child. Yes, a special diet can be a pain in the neck but if your child begins to get better, you do see its worth. So.... If ALL of our children have speech issues and possibly as much as 50-80% have auditory processing issues, would it not make sense to perform a milk trial to just see if this could be a cause of your child's issues? In particular if your child has poor auditory memory and sequencing, it is absolutely worth the 3 weeks of milk deprivation, imo! Personally, if it is the root cause of your child's auditory issues, it is the most beneficial 3 weeks you will ever have spent. If it is not the cause of your childs auditory issues, then you can pencil it off the list and move on to the next item that you need to investigate. But at least you will know! This is the last I want to say of this subject. I feel well qualified to speak here as my son is one of those who did NOT get better until we removed the intolerance. I gave the therapy plenty of time to kick in..... 10 years of continuous therapy to be exact! The improvements were minimal until we dropped the milk. My son was told he would be in special education 'forever'. With the home program that NACD supplied, we eliminated milk and within a year he reentered the regular classroom. No vitamin E, and no fish oils during this period. Today, it really doesn't matter which vitamins I give him.... if I give the child milk or ice-cream, he is quite ill.... period. No exceptions. So.... had I just continued on without trying this, my child would have been handicapped forever. I am so glad that we are delving deeper and determining how to truly make him better medically as well as getting better therapy that is specifically directed towards his needs. I'm running out of time. I trusted the 'traditional' approach for too long and it did nothing but let me down. Janice Mother of Mark, 13 [sPAM][ ] Reasons to eliminate milk http://health. < /message/65336> /group/ /message/65336 There was question about eliminating milk and how you would know if this was an issue for your child? I did some searches on potential reasons why one would eliminate milk from a child's diet. Here is the links and information I gathered. Hope it helps, Tina Children prone to ear infections: http://surefoodsliv <http://surefoodsliving.com/2007/07/16/ear-infections-and-milk/> ing.com/2007/07/16/ear-infections-and-milk/ So, back to ear infections. According to pediatrician Dr. Greene, " Of the kids who are prone to ear infections (about 1/3 of kids), allergies are the underlying cause about 1/3 of the time. Cow's milk is the most likely non-airborne culprit. Presumably, it causes inflammation of the Eustachian tubes - the tubes that normally keep the ears clean and drained. It can also change the nature of the secretions. " Ears and allergies http://www.thenewho <http://www.thenewhomemaker.com/earinfections> memaker.com/earinfections *Allergic Causes* Otitis media is commonly associated with colds. Since colds and allergies can have the same physical effects on the ears and nasal passages, many experts suggest that allergies are the culprit behind some cases of otitis media. If a food allergy is suspected, eliminating milk and milk products, chocolate, tomatoes and tomato products, citrus, sugar, wheat, and/or eggs from your child's diet may be helpful. Information on milk allergy and milk intolerance http://www.allergys <http://www.allergysa.org/milk.htm> a.org/milk.htm Milk contains many protein fractions (allergens) that cause allergic reactions. The two main components are whey and casein, and an individual may be allergic to either or both. The casein is the curd that forms when milk is left to sour, and the whey is the watery fraction which is left after the curd is removed. http://www.asehaqld <http://www.asehaqld.org.au/Leaflets/is_it_really_milk_allergy.htm> ..org.au/Leaflets/is_it_really_milk_allergy.htm Information on Milk allergy, milk intolerance, and lactose intolerance. Information on symptoms of milk allergy or intolerance. http://www.askdrsea <http://www.askdrsears.com/html/3/T032100.asp> rs.com/html/3/T032100.asp The protein in cow's milk is what provokes the allergies. Because milk is a species-specific protein, cow's milk is suited to bovine intestines. Exposure of human intestines to bovine protein may cause irritation and damage to the intestinal lining, allowing these allergenic proteins to be absorbed into the circulatory system. The immune system recognizes these proteins as foreign and attacks them, causing the usual allergy symptoms of wheezing, runny nose, or a red, rough, sandpaper-like rash, especially on the cheeks. Milk allergies are often the underlying cause of repeated colds and ear infections, due to fluid building up in the respiratory passages, sinuses, and eustachian tubes of the ears. Milk allergy has been implicated in subtle behavioral changes, such as irritability and nightwaking. There are degrees of lactose intolerance, depending on the supply of lactase in the gut. Some children and adults can tolerate one glass of milk, but not two or three; or they can drink milk with a meal, but not separately on an empty stomach. Many can tolerate yogurt and cheese, but not milk as a beverage. (The lactose in fermented yogurt is somewhat predigested.) Lactose intolerance is more common than allergy to the protein in milk. Allergic symptoms usually involve the skin and respiratory systems, whereas lactose intolerance is limited to abdominal symptoms. Behavior and allergies http://borntoexplor <http://borntoexplore.org/allergies.htm> e.org/allergies.htm Can Allergies Cause Behavior Problems? Asthma and allergy symptoms http://www.newstarg <http://www.newstarget.com/010443.html> et.com/010443.html In Get Healthy Now, Professor Null explains a milk allergy's changing symptoms: " Even if the symptoms are not the same, the underlying allergy may be. A child who has suffered milk-associated asthma, for instance, may have severe acne as a teenager. The milk allergy is still there, but its symptoms have moved to a different organ system, often misleading the patient and physician into thinking that the original allergy has been outgrown. " According to Alternative Medicine, up to half of all infants may be sensitive to cows' milk. As a result, symptoms of an underlying milk allergy may start as early as infancy, only manifested as eczema, a symptom that may remain later on in childhood and adulthood. Furthermore, in addition to asthma and eczema, an underlying milk allergy may manifest as bronchitis, sinusitis, autoimmune disorders, frequent colds and ear infections and even behavioral problems. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 16, 2008 Report Share Posted February 16, 2008 Janice, I agree, this spells it out very clearly!! Thanks for taking the time. > > You Rock, Janice! This is great info. Charlie had tons of ear infections, > tubes and now without milk he is PRESENT and chatting up a storm. > > Re: [ ] Reasons to eliminate milk > > > > The Gang at NACD ask anyone with a child with any type of auditory > processing issues to do a milk elimination trial as well as to get > tympanograms on a regular basis to determine causation. > > Our children did not end up without the ability to 'hear' for no reason. To > reiterate the thoughtful piece below, the most common cause of an > non-airborne allergen or intolerance with may affect the Ears, nose & throat > is cows milk. Ask any ENT! > > Now, 3 years ago before I became enlightened about auditory processing, I > would have said this: " My child doesn't have hearing issues, I have taken > him to the audiologist many times and he has always passed the test with > flying colours! " Yes, my child ALWAYS passed the tests but in reality, he > couldn't hear everything he should have been hearing. The audiologist > screening is just that.... a screening. I believe someone on this board > posted that the English language is based on over 10,000 tones and there is > no way that an audiologist tests for this. This is why so many of our > children have seen such success with programs such as The Listening Program > (TLP) or other auditory integration programs. > > One quick way to tell if your child has some type of auditory processing > issues is by testing them with digit spans. Here is a link to an article > that explains digit spans and how to test. Look specifically at auditory > digit spans. If you have any questions, please ask the board since there are > many of us who do digit spans with older kids or sequences with younger kids > to work their auditory memories. > > http://www.nacd. > <http://www.nacd.org/more_information/journal/learninghow.html> > org/more_information/journal/learninghow.html > > If your child not performing the digit spans or sequences according to > his/her age level, then you should be seeing a red flag! There is a problem > and you need to find out why. Your child is not 'processing' auditory > information as he/she should and the underlying cause is the root to > remediation! Now, quite often that cause stems from 2 sources: a physical > problem with the ears or an environmental problem with the ears. Any > physical problems with the ears should be addressed by an ENT. An > environmental problem with the ears indicates congestion of some type. > Congestion can result from infection or it can result from an allergen or an > intolerance. I know of no other methods that cause congestion to the ears. > If anyone else does, they can chime in here. > > If you have chronic congestion resulting from infections, your ENT will > probably suggest Tubes. This should be suggested as the child is now at a > point of becoming permanently developmentally delayed as result inadequate > hearing. If you have experiences with ear infections of more than 3 in a > year, tubes should really be considered. If you have congestion that is not > from infection, then this is indicative of an allergen or intolerance that > the child is exposed to. You need to find it and GET RID of IT! This may be > inconvenient but believe me.... it is far more inconvenient to have a > developmentally delayed child; particularly one that has lost the ability to > follow instructions in a school room, drools all of the time, falls all of > the time because his vestibular network has been compromised, etc. etc. For > many of our children milk sensitivities are a ROOT CAUSE for a lot of > problems. Those problems do not go away until the cause of all the trouble > is removed. > > We have learned a lot in the last 10 years and I hope that we have made some > progress that future generations can benefit from. Those of us who have milk > compromised children will tell you..... things don't get better until you > remove the intolerance! I did well over 10 years of therapy with few > gains.... please do not go down my pathway without at least investigating > this possible issue with your child. Yes, a special diet can be a pain in > the neck but if your child begins to get better, you do see its worth. > > So.... > > If ALL of our children have speech issues and possibly as much as 50-80% > have auditory processing issues, would it not make sense to perform a milk > trial to just see if this could be a cause of your child's issues? In > particular if your child has poor auditory memory and sequencing, it is > absolutely worth the 3 weeks of milk deprivation, imo! > > Personally, if it is the root cause of your child's auditory issues, it is > the most beneficial 3 weeks you will ever have spent. If it is not the cause > of your childs auditory issues, then you can pencil it off the list and move > on to the next item that you need to investigate. But at least you will > know! > > This is the last I want to say of this subject. I feel well qualified to > speak here as my son is one of those who did NOT get better until we removed > the intolerance. I gave the therapy plenty of time to kick in..... 10 years > of continuous therapy to be exact! The improvements were minimal until we > dropped the milk. My son was told he would be in special education > 'forever'. With the home program that NACD supplied, we eliminated milk and > within a year he reentered the regular classroom. No vitamin E, and no fish > oils during this period. Today, it really doesn't matter which vitamins I > give him.... if I give the child milk or ice-cream, he is quite ill.... > period. No exceptions. > > So.... had I just continued on without trying this, my child would have been > handicapped forever. I am so glad that we are delving deeper and determining > how to truly make him better medically as well as getting better therapy > that is specifically directed towards his needs. I'm running out of time. I > trusted the 'traditional' approach for too long and it did nothing but let > me down. > > Janice > Mother of Mark, 13 > > [sPAM][ ] Reasons to eliminate milk > > http://health. > < /message/6533 6> > /group/ /message/65336 > There was question about eliminating milk and how you would know if > this was an issue for your child? I did some searches on potential > reasons why one would eliminate milk from a child's diet. > Here is the links and information I gathered. > Hope it helps, > Tina > > Children prone to ear infections: > http://surefoodsliv > <http://surefoodsliving.com/2007/07/16/ear-infections-and-milk/> > ing.com/2007/07/16/ear-infections-and-milk/ > So, back to ear infections. According to pediatrician Dr. Greene, " Of > the kids who are prone to ear infections (about 1/3 of kids), > allergies are the underlying cause about 1/3 of the time. Cow's milk > is the most likely non-airborne culprit. Presumably, it causes > inflammation of the Eustachian tubes - the tubes that normally keep > the ears clean and drained. It can also change the nature of the > secretions. " > > Ears and allergies > http://www.thenewho <http://www.thenewhomemaker.com/earinfections> > memaker.com/earinfections > *Allergic Causes* Otitis media is commonly associated with colds. > Since colds and allergies can have the same physical effects on the > ears and nasal passages, many experts suggest that allergies are the > culprit behind some cases of otitis media. If a food allergy is > suspected, eliminating milk and milk products, chocolate, tomatoes > and tomato products, citrus, sugar, wheat, and/or eggs from your > child's diet may be helpful. > > Information on milk allergy and milk intolerance > http://www.allergys <http://www.allergysa.org/milk.htm> a.org/milk.htm > Milk contains many protein fractions (allergens) that cause allergic > reactions. The two main components are whey and casein, and an > individual may be allergic to either or both. The casein is the curd > that forms when milk is left to sour, and the whey is the watery > fraction which is left after the curd is removed. > > http://www.asehaqld > <http://www.asehaqld.org.au/Leaflets/is_it_really_milk_allergy.htm> > .org.au/Leaflets/is_it_really_milk_allergy.htm > Information on Milk allergy, milk intolerance, and lactose > intolerance. > > Information on symptoms of milk allergy or intolerance. > http://www.askdrsea <http://www.askdrsears.com/html/3/T032100.asp> > rs.com/html/3/T032100.asp > The protein in cow's milk is what provokes the allergies. Because > milk is a species-specific protein, cow's milk is suited to bovine > intestines. Exposure of human intestines to bovine protein may cause > irritation and damage to the intestinal lining, allowing these > allergenic proteins to be absorbed into the circulatory system. The > immune system recognizes these proteins as foreign and attacks them, > causing the usual allergy symptoms of wheezing, runny nose, or a red, > rough, sandpaper-like rash, especially on the cheeks. Milk allergies > are often the underlying cause of repeated colds and ear infections, > due to fluid building up in the respiratory passages, sinuses, and > eustachian tubes of the ears. Milk allergy has been implicated in > subtle behavioral changes, such as irritability and nightwaking. > > There are degrees of lactose intolerance, depending on the supply of > lactase in the gut. Some children and adults can tolerate one glass > of milk, but not two or three; or they can drink milk with a meal, > but not separately on an empty stomach. Many can tolerate yogurt and > cheese, but not milk as a beverage. (The lactose in fermented yogurt > is somewhat predigested.) Lactose intolerance is more common than > allergy to the protein in milk. Allergic symptoms usually involve the > skin and respiratory systems, whereas lactose intolerance is limited > to abdominal symptoms. > > Behavior and allergies > http://borntoexplor <http://borntoexplore.org/allergies.htm> > e.org/allergies.htm > Can Allergies Cause Behavior Problems? > > Asthma and allergy symptoms > http://www.newstarg <http://www.newstarget.com/010443.html> > et.com/010443.html > In Get Healthy Now, Professor Null explains a milk allergy's changing > symptoms: " Even if the symptoms are not the same, the underlying > allergy may be. A child who has suffered milk-associated asthma, for > instance, may have severe acne as a teenager. The milk allergy is > still there, but its symptoms have moved to a different organ system, > often misleading the patient and physician into thinking that the > original allergy has been outgrown. " According to Alternative > Medicine, up to half of all infants may be sensitive to cows' milk. > As a result, symptoms of an underlying milk allergy may start as > early as infancy, only manifested as eczema, a symptom that may > remain later on in childhood and adulthood. Furthermore, in addition > to asthma and eczema, an underlying milk allergy may manifest as > bronchitis, sinusitis, autoimmune disorders, frequent colds and ear > infections and even behavioral problems. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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