> ----------
> From: Johnson, Martha (PHMG)
> Sent: Wednesday, November 11, 1998 5:14 PM
> To: 'lactnet @ library.ummed.edu'
> Subject: ANAPHYLAXIS THRU BREASTMILK
>
> Hello All:
> I just did a routine postpartum home visit with a delightful woman who I
> remember well because she needed so much assistance with her first
> lactation, she and her baby had nearly every problem you can imagine. By
> the time he was around 3 months old, my work partner and I strongly
> suspected he had some major food allergies, but she had things pretty
> well inhand by that time, so I never heard the rest of her case history
> til today.
> When her 1st son was around 5 months old, she was away from home at a
> professional conference,and found herself ravenously hungry, wolfed down
> an entire bowl of peanuts in the hotel cafe, and her baby soon after began
> having grave difficulty breathing, was rushed to the hospital, given
> epinephrine, and recovered. Because we had alerted her to the baby's
> probable allergies, she had asked her ped if she ought to carry Benadryl,
> and her allergist said afterwards that the dose she gave him en route to
> the hospital probably saved his life!
> Her local allergist said he didn't believe it was possible to become
> anaphylactic per exposure to proteins in breastmilk, but since then has
> done research and found a couple cases in the literature.
> This was such an interesting case, but the amazing thing is, this lady
> ate a severely restricted diet for 2 1/2 years so she could breastfeed her
> boy. Pretty great, huh?
> Love to All from Martha Johnson RN, IBCLC in drop dead gorgeous Eugene,
> Oregon
>
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