baby allergies

Andreas Mom

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Jun 9, 2007
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353
So just found out today that my son is allergic to soy and egg proteins.

Im still nursing him andwill do sosince he wont take a bottle all of a sudden :confused3 but its better for him to get my milk anyway......so my point any recipes or food that you recommed that are ok for me/him to eat without breaking the bank?

My bread has soy....any ideas on a good one with no soy?
Yogurts?

Any help would be great :goodvibes
 
I don't have any tips but just want to say, YOU GO MAMA!! Nursing is HARD! I only made it 8 months without any complications. So proud of Mom's who hang in there when they are thrown a MAJOR curve ball like this...honestly I don't know if I would be strong enough to hang in there. Hope someone can give you some great tips and good luck!
 
For this, I would *highly* recommend joining the community forums on mothering.com. There is a TON of support there for nursing and nursing with a restricted diet, and I bet you could get scads of info and recipes there!


And FYI, I don't know how old he is, but you can exclusively nurse him for ages...we were going to go a full year of exclusive nursing with DS, because both DH and I were fed food WAY too early and ended up with lifelong problems, but he decided at just over 11 months that he desperately needed the (organic) apple I was eating. Pushed me over (he used leverage very early on, LOL) grabbed it, took a bite, chewed, swallowed. And we kept the highly allergenic things from him for a good LONG while after that, too. Though I was lucky, and the only thing I ever ate that caused a reaction through milk was grapefruit, but that's only b/c I was already taking grapefruit seed extract for yeast and it just overloaded him. So there's really no rush to find things for him to eat, just in case that was stressing you out.

Go to mothering, find the forums, get info!
 
Oh man. Have we ever been there done that!!! I'm so sorry you're going through it.

My ds was allergic to soy early on. It was HARD!!! There's practically nothing without soy. I made my own bread (let me know if you'd like the recipe). We didn't have the egg allergy, but we had peanut, tree nut, chocolate, seafood, etc, etc, (I can't even remember all the allergies now!). My ds has now outgrown a few and then added a few (sweet potato?! Anaphlyctic to sweet potato???!!! Really?!?! Yes, he's had a reaction!).

I second the Mothering.com recommendations. The women there are wonderful!!!
 

thanks everyone! I will have to check the site out. Caleb is 9 months and has always hada rash that comes and goes and his docotr finally sent us to an alllergist who found this problem.

I nursed my oldest for 16 months and plan to go as long as I can with the baby, even with the new diet.

He doesnt really eat too many things besides baby food but now I have to check that too. He nurses 4-6 times a day so hes still getting a bit of egg and soy. I knew they were both in a lot of foods but wow!!! I am starting to think this will be a bit harder then I thought.

I will check out the mothering website!

Thanks :goodvibes
 
Aww man that stinks!! My DD has a dairy allergy and so I avoid dairy for her. It's really not that hard once you get used to the diet. I'm lactose intollerant so it wasn't that hard for me but soy is a toughie. You just really need to read labels. Big kudos to you for staying commited to nursing, it really is going to help your little one with allergies later on in life.

I 4th (or whatever) Mothering.com (the forums) for lots of info on special diets, there is a great breastfeeding forum there too.

On another forum I'm on someone suggested Pepperidge Farms has a non-soy bread, Herth or Farm something.
Yeah for extended nursing! :)
 
Both my kids had food allergies - I only made it nursing my son for 6 weeks. He developed colic, and reacted to everything I ate. I was so inexperienced, away (far, in Hawaii) from family support, and then found out at 8 months (he was on soy formula) that he tested positive for dairy, egg, sesame, and peanut allergy (after anaphylaxis from a teaspoon of yogurt, he could have died without the epinephrine they gave him at the base clinic).

My DD reacted to dairy in my diet, so I eliminated that, and eggs to be careful, and she weaned herself at 14 months. I got her tested at 2, and she was slightly dairy allergic, but outgrew it.

DS outgrew peanut and sesame, but still is slightly dairy allergic, and definitely egg (just retested as he reacted to his flu shot for the first time this year). He gets a blood test annually at Johns Hopkins Pediatric Allergy clinic. He was also part of their first milk allergy immunotherapy study, and is now tolerating dairy in breads.

I got some good recipes from the FAAN cookbook, but it was an old one. I don't know what they have now, but they may have a cookbook. Mainly, I like the pancake and cake recipes - and cookies too. It takes work, but we have done all our own baking for parties and birthdays. They have substitutions for you too. If you want a specific recipe, PM me and I'll get it to you.

Eating out - that was harder. Other folks (even family) didn't understand how important it was for me to keep dairy out of my diet. My family also never understood how to read labels - they used to constantly try to give my son things that he would react to (and did - one Thanksgiving, my DSIL spoonfed my then 20 month old son mashed potatoes, just one bite. I saw her do it, ran over, and she said it was just one bite. UGH.... I gave him liquid benedryl, as he was already hiving up around his mouth. Sure enough, a short time later, he projectile vomited all over). When I was in a nasty mood, and one of my in-laws would ask, "What would happen if he had some dairy?", thinking maybe he could try some, I would answer, "Well, he could DIE!". He's had anaphylaxis twice.

Just be careful, talk to the servers in restaurants. They are better now than a few years ago, I think.

I haven't had to avoid soy, but think it is a hard one. We have a local organic store chain here, Roots, and the organic places are great. They usually have allergy-free aisles, like for vegans, folks who can't tolerate gluten, and I'm sure they have soy-free things. See if your area has one of those organic market places. That really helped me - you can get rice dream ice cream treats and things. I like having sweets, and with nursing you need to eat snacks to keep up your energy.

Good luck to you!!!
 
My son is 13 months old and we found out he was allergic to egg white at 9 months. I bought a baking substitute called Ener-G Egg Replacer at our local health food store. I used it to bake his birthday cake, and you honestly could not tell that it was an egg free cake. My husband actually said he liked it better than the regular cake! It is a great product but doesn't work well in all recipes (I used it when making brownies and they were gross and oily!).
 
My dd14 is allergic to soy (and a bunch of fruits). Her allergies were diagnosed almost 3 years ago, so obviously I wasn't concerned about those when nursing her!

Soy is very difficult to avoid. Many soy-allergic people can tolerate soybean oil (aka vegetable oil) and soy lecithin. My dd can and it does make life much easier for us. We buy Pepperidge Farms bread mainly (100% Natural line, specificially the 100% Whole Wheat in that line AND the WholeGrain line, specifically the Soft Honey Whole Wheat) Just recently I discovered that Arnold now makes a soy-free bread. The only hamburger/hot dog rolls dd can eat are made by Pepperidge Farms as well. All other brands still contain soy. *****Please note that dd can eat egg so you'd have to check the breads I just mentioned.*****

Dd can eat just about any milk-based yogurt out there. She's just limited by her fruit allergies for that.

Best wishes for your future in label-reading :) It's hard but it will get easier as you are used to it. Develop a tough skin for those annoying know-it-all relatives. We had a horrible experience one Mother's Day with my in-laws. Since then, they've been much better about keeping labels for dd to read.
 
Thanks everyone! I didn't think it would be so hard but everything from my butter to the coffee creamer has soy....such a pain and the egg thing will be hard too but more on the no cake, brownie, cookie part....at least for me :)

but it is all worth it :goodvibes
 


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