The Journal of Student Ministries - http://www.thejournalofstudentministries.com
Childhood Food Allergies Harder to Outgrow
http://www.thejournalofstudentministries.com/articles/107/1/Childhood-Food-Allergies-Harder-to-Outgrow/Page1.html
Surfing the Current

 
By Surfing the Current
Published on 03/24/2008
 
Childhood allergies to milk and eggs appear to be harder to outgrow than in the past, U.S. researchers said recently. While they were often outgrown by age three 20 years ago, such allergies now often persist into late childhood, researchers at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center report in two studies in the Journal of Clinical Immunology. “The bad news is that the prognosis for a child with a milk or egg allergy appears to be worse than it was 20 years ago,” one doctor said. “Not only do more kids have allergies, but fewer of them outgrow their allergies, and those who do, do so later than before.” 

source: Reuters, December 12
Childhood allergies to milk and eggs appear to be harder to outgrow than in the past, U.S. researchers said recently. While they were often outgrown by age three 20 years ago, such allergies now often persist into late childhood, researchers at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center report in two studies in the Journal of Clinical Immunology. “The bad news is that the prognosis for a child with a milk or egg allergy appears to be worse than it was 20 years ago,” one doctor said. “Not only do more kids have allergies, but fewer of them outgrow their allergies, and those who do, do so later than before.”

Wood and colleagues examined medical records of more than 800 children with milk allergies and nearly 900 with egg allergies over a 13-year period. Among children in the study with milk allergies, they found that by age four, less than 20 percent of them had become able to tolerate milk, and by age eight, only 42 percent had outgrown the allergy. That compared with prior studies, which suggested 75 percent of children would overcome their milk allergies by age three. The researchers found a similar trend with egg allergies. Just 4 percent outgrew this allergy by age four, and just 37 percent outgrew it by age 10.

Many of these children eventually did outgrow their allergies, however, with 79 percent of the milk allergy group and 68 percent of the egg allergy group outgrowing their allergies by age 16. And the studies found that some children were able to lose their allergies during adolescence, suggesting that pediatricians should keep testing older children.