Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anecdotally I see more allergies in children conceived with fertility treatments.
Bingo.
I have one child conceived via IVF and another from a surprise pregnancy several years after we had stopped treatment. Guess which one has multiple anaphylactic food allergies? It isn't the IVF baby!
Both were breastfed, and we also did early introduction of major allergens with both.
Yeah but you're missing the point. YOU are the one who had fertility treatment, not the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anecdotally I see more allergies in children conceived with fertility treatments.
Bingo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anecdotally I see more allergies in children conceived with fertility treatments.
Bingo.
I have one child conceived via IVF and another from a surprise pregnancy several years after we had stopped treatment. Guess which one has multiple anaphylactic food allergies? It isn't the IVF baby!
Both were breastfed, and we also did early introduction of major allergens with both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anecdotally I see more allergies in children conceived with fertility treatments.
Bingo.
Anonymous wrote:Anecdotally I see more allergies in children conceived with fertility treatments.
OP here. Who is this intended for? It appears out of context.
Anonymous wrote:It's not just the PP's singular story. There are many of us telling you that we breastfed and did everything "right," and anaphylactic food allergies are still there. I know you want a simplistic answer, but if scientists don't know and can't find the reason, I am pretty sure your attempts to place the blame on maternal laziness are not going to work.
Personally, I believe that the increase in allergies and mental illness are related (not that they are related in a single person, but that there may be a common factor causing the societal increase in both). Histamine is also a neurotransmitter. Many antidepressants have powerful antihistamine properties. They have found elevated histamine levels in some anorexics. There is a potential relationship between these things worthy of more research.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My take:
too 'clean'
formula feeding and plastics from the bottles and nipples.
My two were both exclusively breastfed, and are both allergic to tree nuts; one is also allergic to peanuts. And yes they were exposed and even both ate nuts for YEARS before the allergies developed. As in one day hazelnut spread was fine, and literally the next day, big reaction.
Thank you for the N of 1.
Anonymous wrote:It's not just the PP's singular story. There are many of us telling you that we breastfed and did everything "right," and anaphylactic food allergies are still there. I know you want a simplistic answer, but if scientists don't know and can't find the reason, I am pretty sure your attempts to place the blame on maternal laziness are not going to work.
Personally, I believe that the increase in allergies and mental illness are related (not that they are related in a single person, but that there may be a common factor causing the societal increase in both). Histamine is also a neurotransmitter. Many antidepressants have powerful antihistamine properties. They have found elevated histamine levels in some anorexics. There is a potential relationship between these things worthy of more research.