I know this is a bit off topic, but I'm curious when you say your daughter's number is off the chart. My son has a dairy allergy, but the allergist never suggested any testing. He said we didn't need a test to know he had the allergy, just because he had pretty strong symptoms. Is this a blood test that shows the degree of allergy? I think that's something I'd like to know. Maybe I need a new doctor.![]()
No problem - our dd reacted to milk when she was about 5 months old. Hives, vomiting etc. they did a blood test to see if she tested positive for anything else. On a scale of 0-100, her peanut reading simply says greater than 100. Her milk was somewhere around 35. I think a lot of docs don't do blood tests bc they can give false positives. The only way to really confirm an allergy is to expose them to it (ingestion or scratch test). Her peanut number is so high we won't risk it. But that's probably why your doc didn't do a blood test. You could request one I'm sure, but just be aware of the false positive possibility and that a lot of insurance companies won't cover it. Hope that helps - let me know if you have any questions or if I didn't explain that well enough!!
