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allergy test in infants ?

Question:
My 4 mo son had a GI visit today for breastfeeding colitis. The dr feels it is probably caused by allergies, but wants him to have skin tests done to confirm or refute that before she considers further investigations. Does anyone know anything about the risks associated with skin tests in infants, and whether they are reliable?


Answer:
When our son was 4 months the doctor did allergy tests on myself instead of the baby, since the foods affecting him were obviously coming from breast milk
(that was all he was given) and so were probably things I was allergic to. I also found it helped if I reduced my intake of milk (which didn't show up in any tests). The doctor was reluctant to do tests before 3 - 3.5 years, but I can't remember why now. Skin testing for allergies is usually not recommended for infants and small children til about age 4, since the immune system is not fully developed. There is the danger of an allergic reaction to skin tests, or it could cause a sensitivity to develop. However blood tests for allergy could be done. See: http://babyparenting.about.com/library/Users/uc061101a.htm "Traditionally, allergy tests were performed by allergists using skin testing which involves pricking the skin to apply allergens, with a raised welt indicating sensitivity. Skin testing, however, carries the risk of an allergic reaction, and is not recommended for young children, seniors, those taking antihistamines, or those with dermatitis and other skin conditions. Previously, allergy blood tests were less accurate than skin testing, but a new blood test, ImmunoCAP™, is not only as accurate as a skin test in determining specific allergies, it is the first and only allergy test approved by the FDA to test them quantitatively. Family physicians, pediatricians and allergy specialists can draw a blood sample that is analyzed in a laboratory. Health professionals then detect the presence of IgE, an antibody circulating in the blood when the body is fighting an allergen. " I certainly agree with you that skin tests are not in order here, but let me make some comments about the comments. It takes at least several months of contact with inhalant allergens before a significant IgE response can be mounted. Four months is too soon for "hay fever" to develop: by the time the IgE response has occured that first season is over. We do not expect ever to see hay fever type reactions until at least the child's second season, but it can happen by then, and positive skin tests to pollens may be seen shortly after that first season; that is, within the child's second year. If it appears that there is true inhalant allergic rhinitis showing before age one, only house dust or the family pet would be suspected, because of the continuous and prolonged exposure, and I have found confirmation from skin prick tests before the first birthday. The most likely cause of allergic rhinitis within the first year would be food allergy, and skin testing for food allergy is controversial at best. Pediatricians are often not trained in allergy and therefore think of skin testing as a rather barbarous procedure, and some don't very much believe in the benefits of allergy investigation and treatment anyway. These, I believe, are the reasons that parents are so often told that their child is too young for testing. Large and itchy skin tests may develop in the infant, as in the adult, but it should be remembered that there have been no fatalities reported anywhere in the world's medical literature due to skin scratch testing since a 1963 fatal reaction to a penicillin test. Sensitization does not occur due to tests for IgE-mediated allergy. There is always the danger of this when patch tests are done to identify the cause of delayed hypersensitivity reactions, and it is for this reason that testing for poison ivy is never performed. Skin testing that is done as part of a study to be reported in the literature is never done on a patient who is receiving antihistamines. However if allergic symptoms are present at the time of testing, it is clear that the antihistamines are not suppressing the immediate reaction and skin tests, though diminished in size, are likely to be positive. However there is a recent report that children under 6 months of age are at greatly increased risk of generalized reaction from skin prick tests. Devenney I, Falth-Magnusson K; "Skin prick tests may give generalized allergic reactions in infants"; Ann Allergy Asthma Immunol 2000 Dec;85(6 Pt 1):457-60.



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