Anonymous wrote:This sounds old school. I also have a six month old who was in the ER the first time we gave eggs, and he tested positive for peanut too. Our allergist had me give increasing amounts of bamba puffs daily for several weeks then had me give peanut butter. He’s tolerating it without any reaction, but who knows if it was a false positive or if we desensitized him.
We started baked eggs even though he had a severe reaction to scrambled, and he’s fine. We are giving baked eggs daily now and will start the egg ladder if he stays okay with this. No family history here either. I think you should get a second opinion!
Anonymous wrote:Would a skin prick test ever be valid if the person had never had the allergen before?
Anonymous wrote:unclear where you're located but if in/near MD highly recommend Burcin Fraser- she's an expert in OIT and will do an oral food challenge before declaring anything an allergy (my 6 month old tested positive on skin and blood to egg and dairy but we did oral challenges of both in the office and were told to eat them and not avoid any other allergens besides her one allergy of avocado-- which unfortunately was my kid's first food). my niece has done OIT for peanuts there and now eats a large amount of bamba per day (to maintain her dose)
Anonymous wrote:Very smart of you get a second opinion. We loved Allergy Partners of Springfield. Worth a drive if you don’t live in that area.
Anonymous wrote:Go to an allergist. Don't leave this up to a pediatrician or family practice to manage.
I developed a peanut allergy as a teenager, and my younger DD is anaphylactic to eggs (discovered at 8mo via anaphylaxis after trying scrambled eggs). She also had severe eczema that was likely related, as I had eaten LOTS of eggs while breastfeeding (prior to her diagnosis), and her eczema completely disappeared when my milk dried up at 6mo and we switched to formula.
Bloodwork and skin test results are only reliable about 50% of the time. Lots of false positives. Your doctor shouldn't be testing for foods that have not caused a reaction. If she has a confirmed allergy, you ABSOLUTELY need to make sure you get a prescription for epinephrine (either AuviQ or EpiPen or generic) and make sure it goes everywhere baby goes. Previous reactions are not predictive of future severity.
Find an allergist, now.
Anonymous wrote:Very smart of you get a second opinion. We loved Allergy Partners of Springfield. Worth a drive if you don’t live in that area.