Hello Jan,
According to one of the resources we use (the site of the Hospital Marina
Alta, in Denia, Spain) insect venoms has high molecular weight thus it is
barely secreted to milk.

You can check the information and references in English in
http://www.e-lactancia.org/ingles/inicio.asp, select "Check by Product",
scroll down to "Insect Sting".

Hope this helps.

Veronica


On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 7:50 PM, LACTNET automatic digest system <
[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> There are 7 messages totalling 374 lines in this issue.
>
>
>  5. bee stings
>
> Date:    Thu, 11 Sep 2008 17:26:16 -0400
> From:    Jan Wenk <[log in to unmask]>
> Subject: bee stings
>
> Hi  All,
>
> I just got a phone message from a woman who was just stung on her right
> breast X 2. and wants to know if she can still nurse. I called her back,
> but
> I have only gotten her message machine. I do not know the age of the baby,
> nor do I know if she has any other children with a history of anaphylactic
> shock. I left her a message with my questions and directed her to her ped.
> I
> have also left a message with the Lactation Study Center here at the
> University of Rochester, but they are not in the office. If anyone has any
> thoughts, please let me know.
>
> Thanks,
> Jan Wenk, IBCLC
> Rochester, NY
>
>



-- 
Verónica Garea
APL LLL Argentina
GALM Bariloche
IBFAN Bariloche - LLL Argentina
"Es más difícil desintegrar un prejuicio que un átomo / It is harder to
crack a prejudice than an atom"
Albert Einstein

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