Toronto Fashion Monitor
NewsXML Home
Fashion Cares 2006
All News
NEW! Fashion Blog
NEW! Celebrity Q&A
Fashion News
Beauty News
Celebrity News
Fashion Models
Celebrity Moms
Gossip
Romance
Celebrity Style
Shopping
Movies
Music
Television
Design
Books
Hot Tech
Travel
Gourmet
Lifestyle
FASHIONWEEK
Academy Awards
Health
Beauty TopList
Beauty Reviews
Home and Garden
Ask the Expert!
Sales and Offers
Google
Web
Fashion Monitor
Subscribe to receive our weekly newsletter!
Subscribe
Unsubscribe
Beauty Guide

Drinking Milk to Ease Allergy to Dairy?

Giving children with milk allergies increasingly higher doses of milk over time may ease, and even help them completely overcome, their allergic reactions, according to the results of a study led by the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center.

 


Giving children with milk allergies increasingly higher doses of milk over time may ease, and even help them completely overcome, their allergic reactions.

These findings result from a study led by the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center jointly with Duke University.

Despite the small number of patients in the trial – 19 – the findings are illuminating and encouraging, investigators say, because this is the first-ever double-blinded and placebo-controlled study of milk immunotherapy.

In the study, the researchers compared a group of children receiving milk powder to a group of children receiving placebo identical in appearance and taste to real milk powder.

Neither the patients nor the investigators knew which child received which powder, a rigorous research setup that minimizes the chance for error and bias.

The findings of the study are reported online ahead of print, Oct. 28, in the Journal of Allergy & Clinical Immunology

“Our findings suggest that oral immunotherapy gradually retrains the immune system to completely disregard or to better tolerate the allergens in milk that previously caused allergic reactions,” says Robert Wood, M.D., senior investigator on the study and director of Allergy & Immunology at Hopkins Children’s.

“Albeit preliminary and requiring further study, these results suggest that oral immunotherapy may be the closest thing yet to a ‘true’ treatment for food allergy.”

Currently, food allergy management involves complete avoidance of the trigger foods, waiting for the child to outgrow the allergy or treating allergic reactions if and when they occur.

Common foods are difficult to avoid and some reactions can be severe and even life-threatening.

 


In a report released Oct. 22, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that food allergies are on the rise with three million children in the United States now having at least one food allergy, an 18 percent jump from 10 years ago. Milk allergy is the most prevalent type of food allergy.

“Given that the quality of life of a child with a food allergy is comparable to the quality of life of a child with diabetes, we urgently need therapies that go beyond strict food avoidance or waiting for the child to outgrow the allergy,” Wood says.

Researchers followed allergic reactions over four months among 19 children with severe and persistent milk allergy, 6 to 17 years of age. Of the 19 patients, 12 received progressively higher doses of milk protein, and seven received placebo.

At the beginning of the study, the children were able to tolerate on average only 40 mg (.04 ounces or a quarter of a teaspoon) of milk.

At the end of the four-month study, both groups were given milk powder as a “challenge” to see what dose would cause reaction after the treatment.

The children who had been receiving increasingly higher doses of milk protein over a few months were able to tolerate a median dose of 5, 140 mg (over 5 ounces) of milk without having any allergic reaction or with mild symptoms, such as mouth itching and minor abdominal discomfort.

Those who had been getting the placebo remained unable to tolerate doses higher than the 40 mg of milk powder without having an allergic reaction. In the group receiving milk protein, the lowest tolerance dose was 2, 540 mg (2.5 ounces) and the highest was 8,140 mg (8 ounces).

Lab tests showed the children who regularly drank or ate milk had more antibodies to milk in their blood, yet were able to better tolerate milk than those who took the placebo.

Researchers say, tolerance in children treated with milk continued to build over time, and recommend that these children continue to consume milk daily to maintain their resistance.

The researchers caution that it remains unclear whether the children would maintain their tolerance once they stop consuming milk regularly.

“It may very well be that this tolerance is lost once the immune system is no longer exposed to the allergen daily,” Wood says. 
 Other news

ADHD Linked to Depression, Poor Health in Moms

Lack of Sleep Leads to Heart Disease

Vitamins, Minerals Don't Fight Cancers?

Eating at Buffets Equals Obesity

New Uses for Botox Found

Alzheimer’s Disease: Women Affected More Often than Men

Seven Ways to Save Money on Prescription Drugs

Obesity May Alter Thyroid Function

New Camera Detects Breast Tumors Even Better

Long-lasting Cold or Sinusitis?

Do You Know You’re Having a Stroke?

High Blood Pressure Worse in African Americans than in White Men

Smoking Causes Bladder Cancer

Allergies May Help Prevent Cancer

Testosterone Therapy may Harm Women

Peanut Allergy Can be Prevented

Vaccines for Adults: Which Do You Need?

Ten Signs of Disease: What Not to Ignore

Eating Grapes Fights High Blood Pressure

Drinking Milk to Ease Allergy to Dairy?

Copyright © 2004 VG Systems Consulting Inc
liveinternet.ru