Peanut Allergy Epidemic May Be Overstated

crcormier

<font color=green>We laughed, as it was quite appr
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Thought this was interesting from the Boston Globe. Kind of reflects how much more reactionary parents can be these days, and I think a lot of it has to do with the media: magazines, the internet and the dreaded "Special Report" on the evening news.


Peanut allergy epidemic may be overstated
By Dr. Darshak Sanghavi | January 30, 2006

My son had his birthday party recently at an indoor play space, and a sign there got me thinking. Peanut-containing foods were prohibited ''due to the increased incidence of peanut allergies."

Anxieties about peanut allergy are understandable -- the condition can be deadly -- and some concerned parents today support banning peanut-containing foods from public places.

But the medical research suggests that severe peanut allergies are not as common as people think and are surprisingly difficult to diagnose accurately. And although, as a parent, it may seem that peanut allergies have reached epidemic proportions, the evidence is surprisingly thin.

True allergies result when the immune system mistakes innocent substances -- like dust, pet dander, and food proteins -- for harmful invaders. Almost a century ago, the scientist Carl Prausnitz injected his skin with blood from a colleague allergic to fish and got hives at the injection sites upon eating fish. Later, scientists realized that blood from allergy sufferers contains an antibody called IgE, which erroneously attracts friendly fire from the immune system and can cause runny noses, red eyes, wheezing, hives, and, rarely, shock and death.

According to Anne Munoz-Furlong, a researcher and the founder of the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network, an advocacy group, today about 25 percent of parents believe that their children have food allergies, although only about 4 percent really do. A parent may suspect one after a few spit-ups or a screaming fit following a new food. Yet these are rarely true allergies. And even among children with true allergies caused by harmful IgE, only a tiny fraction will have life-threatening reactions, called anaphylaxis.

While food (and, particularly, peanut) allergies make headlines -- like the Canadian teen who died last November after kissing her boyfriend who'd eaten a peanut butter sandwich -- the Archives of Internal Medicine in 2004 reported that the average person's chance of food-induced anaphylaxis is about 4 in 100,000 per year. Roughly the same number of Americans each year die from lightning strikes as from peanut allergies.

A well-publicized household telephone survey published last year in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology suggested that rates of peanut allergies among children had doubled from 0.4 percent of the total population to 0.8 percent between 1997 and 2002. But the data were not verified by allergy tests, and it's not clear whether the numbers are meaningful. In the families surveyed in 2002, the rate of peanut allergies among children under 5 was essentially the same as the rate among 6- to 10-year-olds, indicating no sudden increase in allergic youngsters.

The only similar study of peanut allergy using clinical testing and not surveys occurred in Britain's Isle of Wight and found an increase from 0.5 percent to 1 percent of all children from 1989 to 1996. However, the study was small, and the authors said the difference was not ''statistically significant"; in other words, the difference might be due only to chance.

Studying peanut allergies is complicated since the diagnosis can be uncertain. The only 100 percent reliable way to tell if someone has a peanut allergy is to feed them peanuts or a placebo in a clinical setting to see if a reaction occurs -- a so-called food challenge. But because of the cost and the slight risk of precipitating a severe reaction, this test is not often done.

Instead, doctors usually rely on the safer skin prick test, in which a tiny dose of peanuts gets injected under the skin to see if a hive forms.

This test isn't very precise, though. According to a 2001 study from Clinical and Experimental Allergy, only 40 percent of children with even strongly positive skin tests (a hive more than 5 millimeters wide) had positive food challenges -- and of them, only half had reactions needing any treatment.

Directly measuring a child's IgE level by a blood test isn't much better. Data from a major federal health database suggest that only 1 in 6 people with peanut-specific IgE actually shows symptoms. And while extremely high levels often do mean real allergy, the converse is untrue; most children with real allergies don't have very high IgE levels.

To diagnose peanut allergy accurately, an experienced doctor carefully reviews the story of the child's reaction, then orders skin-prick and blood tests. In some cases, the data are so negative that true allergy is impossible or so positive that food challenge might be dangerous. But for those in between -- which are a lot of children -- the challenge is the only way to be certain.

The diagnosis shouldn't be made lightly. In a 2003 study, children told they were peanut allergic had more anxiety and felt more physically restricted than children with juvenile diabetes.

Though severe peanut allergies are extremely uncommon, many parents want to know how to prevent them.

One widely held theory -- endorsed by the American Academy of Pediatrics -- is that allergy might be avoided if the mother stays away from peanuts and other likely food allergens during pregnancy and breastfeeding and that children shouldn't be given them until at least 2 years of age. But supporting research is absent.

The best study, published in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology in 1995, showed that a strict maternal diet coupled with delayed introduction of allergenic foods had no impact on long-term risk of ''food allergy, atopic dermatitis, allergic rhinitis, asthma, any atopic disease, lung function, food or aeroallergen sensitization, [or] serum IgE level."

Some recent data suggest that avoiding antireflux medications like Zantac, peanut-containing diaper and breast creams, and soy-based formulas may be sensible for infants with a strong family history of peanut allergy.

Finally, despite their best attempts to avoid peanuts and carefully read labels, the average person with true peanut allergy still gets a reaction every three to five years. Yet only one in three parents of allergic children has a potentially life-saving dose of EpiPen nearby and knows how to use it. Affected children should never be without an EpiPen and someone who knows how to use it.

Dr. Darshak Sanghavi, an assistant professor of pediatrics at UMass Medical School, can be reached at www.darshaksanghavi.com.
 
Well, that's certainely interesting. We don't have a ban on peanut foods at our school YET. I was suprised that we don't when I first started working there tbh.

But I do think that allergies are overrated today. EVERYBODY is allergic to everything it seems like. Now granted, I realize that true allergies do exist.. DH and I are allergic to grass, mold and certain pollens. I am also lactose intolerant.

But it's my belief (YMMV) that the REASON so many people are allergic to so many things today is because we live in an oversanitized world. I keep my house clean, but I don't wipe down the counters with Clorox every night or anything extreme like that.

TOV
 
As the mother of a peanut allergic child, I have never heard anyone refer to peanut allergies as an epidemic - although everyone is in agreement that they are on the rise in this generation. The author of that article resorted to sensationalism in his title to get people to read it IMO.

I always think it's interesting that we live daily with this allergy, yet I hear more about it on this board than anywhere else.
 

TheOtherVillainess said:
But it's my belief (YMMV) that the REASON so many people are allergic to so many things today is because we live in an oversanitized world. \TOV

:rotfl2: That would so not be our problem!

But I swear the kids with asthma always seem to come from freaky clean pet-free homes.
 
Disneyrsh said:
:rotfl2: That would so not be our problem!

But I swear the kids with asthma always seem to come from freaky clean pet-free homes.

Well, come on over to my house. Dogs, dirt, yucky bathrooms, dried food on the counter and....an asthmatic, peanut allergy ridden DS! :teeth:
 
Disneyrsh said:
It's like having a loaded gun in the pantry...


Wow. That has got to be just about the most over-blown, ridiculous statement I've ever read here. And that is saying a lot. Really. :faint:
 
Disneyrsh said:
It's like having a loaded gun in the pantry...


For you that may be true. But for the majority of the world it isn't. Overall, I think the point of the article and the fact that this topic is discussed fairly often here is why are the rest of us being penalized for a relatively rare allergy? Yes I know it can be deadly. But so can ANY allergy in the right (or is that wrong?) person.

I personally am allergic to bug stings/bites. I have severe reactions. My airway closes so yes, theoretically I could die from my reaction. Do I think that all the little bees, wasps and other nasty little buggers should be gathered up and shipped out? No. I think I should learn how to best avoid and take care of the situation should it arise.

I just really feel like the squeaky wheel is getting far more than it's fair share of oil these days.
 
Disneyrsh said:
Yeah, well, you watch your kid vomit and go into convulsions because she ate a peanut one day, like every other day, and then that happens.

Don't you dare tell me watching my daughter nearly die is an overblown, ridiculous statement. Just be glad you've never had to witness your child go though something as horrifying as we did.


I didn't say that watching your child almost die was an overblow and ridiculous statment. That doesn't even make any sense.

Your child is allergic, and I'm really sorry about that. It does sound horrible, and I hate that you all had to go through that. But, to say that every jar of peanut butter in every pantry across the country is a loaded gun just waiting to go off and kill someone - which is definately what your post implied - is nuts.

And, for what it's worth, I've watched my child go through MANY horrifying things.
 
GEM said:
Wow. That has got to be just about the most over-blown, ridiculous statement I've ever read here. And that is saying a lot. Really. :faint:


With all due respect, no it is not. One pull of the trigger can kill my child. So can one taste of a peanut. I kid you not...he had head to toe hives, and swelling of his eyes and tongue the first time he even tasted peanut butter. He didn't even injest it...he stuck the saltine cracker with peanut butter in his mouth, touched it to his tongue, and spit it out. 2 minutes later, complete hives and swelling. So is peanut butter the same as a loaded gun to my child? You're darn right it is...it could kill him just as fast as a loaded gun can. And sadly, he's more likely to come into contact with peanut butter than a loaded gun. :sad:
 
NCDisneyMom said:
With all due respect, no it is not. One pull of the trigger can kill my child. So can one taste of a peanut. I kid you not...he had head to toe hives, and swelling of his eyes and tongue the first time he even tasted peanut butter. He didn't even injest it...he stuck the saltine cracker with peanut butter in his mouth, touched it to his tongue, and spit it out. 2 minutes later, complete hives and swelling. So is peanut butter the same as a loaded gun to my child? You're darn right it is...it could kill him just as fast as a loaded gun can. And sadly, he's more likely to come into contact with peanut butter than a loaded gun. :sad:


So, then say that. That's it's a loaded gun FOR YOUR CHILD. Don't try to imply that every home across the country with peanut butter in the cabinet is a ticking time bomb. It just isn't true. (I'm referring to the previous poster here, not you, NCDisneyMom.)
 
Disneyrsh said:
Clark Howard's two year old daughter nearly died after eating a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, the same pb & j she'd been eating for a year, when she suddenly had an allergic reaction to it.

It's like having a loaded gun in the pantry...
--------------------------------------

My DD was always able to eat seafood - then several years ago she bit into a shrimp roll and her lips, tongue and throat began to swell so severely she was rushed to the ER by amubulance..

For years I have taken sulfa drugs with no problems.. A few years back I took 1 pill and immediately had a severe reaction ranging from burning, itching hives to difficulty breathing..

My sisters son once had a very severe reaction to a slice of wheat bread - something he had been eating for years..

Severe allergies can occur from anything - at any time - so what is the solution? You can't ban all food products and drugs because there "might" be a reaction..

Also, for those who don't have an allergy to peanut butter, it's actually a very healthy food source.. It wouldn't make sense to do away with it simply because a small segment of the population has - or might have - a reaction to it..
 
I have a serious caffeine allergy. It was diagnosed when I was 14 months old and had a tiny drink of Tab pop. I swelled up so fast that my air tube was blocked and I could not breathe. My Grandparents saved my life by rushing me to the hospital where the doctor was waiting outside the ER doors, grabbed me out of the window of the car and rushed me inside where they treated me. By the time my mother got to the hospital (she was working) the swelling had reduced and my head still looked like a basketball. My eyes, nose and mouth were unrecognizable they were so swollen. They later did the scratch tests on me and I still remember how horrible they were 30 years later.

When I had children my first DD was given some chocolate. She did the same thing I did the first time I had some(three weeks before I stopped breathing), she developed some small red hives on her face. Right then and there I decided that my kids would either be tested or we would avoid caffeine. My doctor would not test the kids because it is very traumatic (I remember how awful it was). So my kids avoid anything with caffeine in it.

I have a serious allergy, they may or may not, but I'm not willing to find out. I cant only speak for our situation but until they come out with a better test, which I'm sure they will we may or may not have children with allergies.
 
I don't have anyone in my home with an allergy to peanuts, but I totally respect people who do. :thumbsup2 You just don't know when you might be in their shoes.
 
C.Ann said:
--------------------------------------

My DD was always able to eat seafood - then several years ago she bit into a shrimp roll and her lips, tongue and throat began to swell so severely she was rushed to the ER by amubulance..

For years I have taken sulfa drugs with no problems.. A few years back I took 1 pill and immediately had a severe reaction ranging from burning, itching hives to difficulty breathing..

My sisters son once had a very severe reaction to a slice of wheat bread - something he had been eating for years..

Severe allergies can occur from anything - at any time - so what is the solution? You can't ban all food products and drugs because there "might" be a reaction..

Also, for those who don't have an allergy to peanut butter, it's actually a very healthy food source.. It wouldn't make sense to do away with it simply because a small segment of the population has - or might have - a reaction to it..

Ahhhhhh ... the voice of reason! Thanks Ann!

I have tremendous sympathy for those who deal with life-threatening allergies. Although we don't have any in the family, I grew up in a family where my dad was seriously allergic to a huge number of things - we read every label, talked to every chef in every restaurant we went to etc. We made sure when cooking that his food never came into contact with even a tiny bit of seasoning that was being used to cook other food. It was tough, but we all learned to deal with it. My mom changed her diet eventually because it was just easier! Peanut producst are just one thing that people can have a life-threatening reaction to. They are more accessible to kids by their very nature, which is likely why people have become so vigilant where they are concerned. But an all-out ban on peanut products that are actually a great source of protein for kids who may not be able to eat other sources (like dairy etc.) just doesn't seem fair to me. It's penalizing many to cater to the needs of a few. True we're talking about something that can kill - but we're also talking about a pretty small % of people. I agree with reasonable precautions, but my opinion is that these precautions are starting to infringe too much on the general population.
 
disykat said:
As the mother of a peanut allergic child, I have never heard anyone refer to peanut allergies as an epidemic - although everyone is in agreement that they are on the rise in this generation. The author of that article resorted to sensationalism in his title to get people to read it IMO.
What is sensationalistic about "Peanut allergy epidemic may be overstated"?
 
Disneyrsh said:
:rotfl2: That would so not be our problem!

But I swear the kids with asthma always seem to come from freaky clean pet-free homes.

Wow, I've seen many studies on the rising cuase of ashtma but never one that linked it to freaky clean pet-free homes. I have seen asthma linked to allergies such as dust mites, cat dander, molds, grass/tree pollens etc...the list goes on. I could see why someone would want to rid their home of pets or dust if their kid had breathing problems related to it (might be one explantion of a clean pet-free house...I'm not sure about freaky?) I think astham effects dirty people too...maybe even worse.
 
U2_rocks said:
Ahhhhhh ... the voice of reason! Thanks Ann!

I have tremendous sympathy for those who deal with life-threatening allergies. Although we don't have any in the family, I grew up in a family where my dad was seriously allergic to a huge number of things - we read every label, talked to every chef in every restaurant we went to etc. We made sure when cooking that his food never came into contact with even a tiny bit of seasoning that was being used to cook other food. It was tough, but we all learned to deal with it. My mom changed her diet eventually because it was just easier! Peanut producst are just one thing that people can have a life-threatening reaction to. They are more accessible to kids by their very nature, which is likely why people have become so vigilant where they are concerned. But an all-out ban on peanut products that are actually a great source of protein for kids who may not be able to eat other sources (like dairy etc.) just doesn't seem fair to me. It's penalizing many to cater to the needs of a few. True we're talking about something that can kill - but we're also talking about a pretty small % of people. I agree with reasonable precautions, but my opinion is that these precautions are starting to infringe too much on the general population.


Just to make it clear (not just to this poster above, but in general), not all of us dealing with the allergy are asking for an all-out ban. My son (who IS allergic, based on actual reaction to peanut butter, skin test, and blood test), is in Kindergarten this year. He's not even 6 yet. While he is very aware of his allergy, and carries his epi-pen on him at all times, certain precautions have been made. For example, no snacks with nuts in the actual classroom. In the lunchroom, he sits at the end of the long table, and his teachers check the other kids' lunches and make sure that no one with nuts sits next to, or directly across, from him. The children are certainly allowed to bring the peanut butter to school...they just can't sit by my son if they do. If they've had peanut butter for lunch, they must wash their hands thoroughly before entering the classroom. Every new playdate with a new friend, or a birthday party, has to be preceeded by a phone call with the other Mom, to see if we can keep him safe. What it comes down to is that they are all 5 and 6 years old. They won't "think" sometimes, and mistakes can happen. So, we take extra precautions at this time. As ds gets older, and can take more responsibility for his allergy, there will not be as much "hovering" over him.

To some extent, I feel like we're lucky. My son can be in the same room as the peanuts, he just can't touch them, and certainly can't injest them. Some people cannot even breathe in peanut residue without going into anaphylactic shock.
 
NCDisneyMom said:
Just to make it clear (not just to this poster above, but in general), not all of us dealing with the allergy are asking for an all-out ban. My son (who IS allergic, based on actual reaction to peanut butter, skin test, and blood test), is in Kindergarten this year. He's not even 6 yet. While he is very aware of his allergy, and carries his epi-pen on him at all times, certain precautions have been made. For example, no snacks with nuts in the actual classroom. In the lunchroom, he sits at the end of the long table, and his teachers check the other kids' lunches and make sure that no one with nuts sits next to, or directly across, from him. The children are certainly allowed to bring the peanut butter to school...they just can't sit by my son if they do. If they've had peanut butter for lunch, they must wash their hands thoroughly before entering the classroom. Every new playdate with a new friend, or a birthday party, has to be preceeded by a phone call with the other Mom, to see if we can keep him safe. What it comes down to is that they are all 5 and 6 years old. They won't "think" sometimes, and mistakes can happen. So, we take extra precautions at this time. As ds gets older, and can take more responsibility for his allergy, there will not be as much "hovering" over him.

To some extent, I feel like we're lucky. My son can be in the same room as the peanuts, he just can't touch them, and certainly can't injest them. Some people cannot even breathe in peanut residue without going into anaphylactic shock.


That all sounds very reasonable, and I hope it does help keep your little guy safe. I certainly never meant to be insensetive to those dealing with what I know is a scary condition. I just wanted to point out that saying we should ban peanut products and comparing jars of peanut butter to loaded guns is just way beyond reasonable.
 


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