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Multiple Food Allergies


jsib

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jsib Newbie

Does anyone else have a child with soy, dairy,egg white,citrus (=tomato),nut,bean,honey allergies? My son eats about 5 different foods. Have him on a childs medical food shake for extra nutrients. He eats 5 meals a day and is ALWAYS HUNGRY. I am suppose to rotate food but that is really hard. Now the Dr. thinks he might also have a rice sensitivity...


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Sharon C. Explorer

I am really sorry to hear what you are going through. My son has always just had a peanut allergy, and recently he was positive for an initial screening for gluten intolerence. I'm sorry, I don't have much advice, just compassion and a hope that things get better for you and your child.

Sharon

  • 2 months later...
BigDogMax Newbie

Actually our 15-month old son seems to be suffering from the same things (peas, soy, eggs, gluten, lactose, etc...) and to top it off he was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes three weeks ago so it is a real challenge to figure out what to feed him. Feel free to email me to swap suggestions and ideas. Best, Alex

BigDogMax Newbie

Actually our 15-month old son seems to be suffering from the same things (peas, soy, eggs, gluten, lactose, etc...) and to top it off he was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes three weeks ago so it is a real challenge to figure out what to feed him. Feel free to email me to swap suggestions and ideas. Best, Alex

tarnalberry Community Regular

The only thing I can suggest is trying to write down ALL the foods you can think of (apples, bananas, millet, corn, avocados, coconut, chicken, fish... walk through the grocery store with a notebook if it helps) that don't violate the intolerances, and try them on him - and again after a few months if he balks the first time.

(BTW, I'm curious about your citrus(=tomatoes) statement... tomatoes and citrus are not in the same family, so that statement surprises me... Can you help me understand?)

  • 3 weeks later...
Guest Ma Whit

You know, even though they aren't in the same family, I group citrus and tomato together too. DS reacts the same to both of them. :unsure:

darlindeb25 Collaborator
;) i can help there too---tomatoes are a vegetable, but also considered a fruit--they are acid as are so many of the fruits--there is acid in many of the citrus fruits--so therefore, you could classify them in the same way :rolleyes: now--did that make sense, i'm not sure it does to me :lol: deb

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tarnalberry Community Regular

I wouldn't group them as they're different botanically, though I'm not disputing that someone can have problems with both. ;-) Tomatoes are a different family - acid content isn't necessarily the common factor - many other fruits/vegetables are acidic and related to neither of those. (For example, apples and apricots have a lower pH than tomatoes.) But I would note that since tomatoes are part of the nightshade family, it's worth being careful about potatoes, eggplant, cherries, sweet peppers, and petunias, as they're in the same botanical family.

  • 2 weeks later...
pbeyers Newbie

My 4.5 year old has had severe food allergies to all protein (legumes, all meats, nuts, dairy, egg, soy, etc.) since he was 4 months old and he was diagnosed with Celiac on top of it in September. It has been a hard road and some days are better than others. He eats lots of corn/rice pasta, potato in all shapes and forms and tons of fruits and veggies. It's hard and I feel for you but it can be done! My son has also been on Neocate formula since 2 years old. It's expensive but so worth it because he has been in the 97th % in weight since birth. He's a big boy and nobody would guess that he has all of these problems. Good luck.

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      Welcome to the celiac.com community, @GlorietaKaro! As Scott indicated, without formal testing for celiac disease, which would require you to have been consuming generous amounts of gluten daily for weeks, it would be not be possible to distinguish whether you have celiac disease or NCGS (Non Celiac Gluten Sensitivity). Their symptoms overlap. The difference being that celiac disease is an autoimmune disorder that damages the lining of the small bowel. We actually no more about celiac disease than we do about NCGS, the mechanism of the latter being more difficult to classify. There are specific antibody tests for celiac disease diagnosis and there is also the endoscopy/biopsy of the small bowel lining. Currently, there are no tests to diagnose NCGS. Celiac disease must first ruled out. Researchers are working on developing testing methods to diagnose celiac disease that do not require a "gluten challenge" which is just out of the question for so many because it poses serious, even life-threatening, health risks. But we aren't there yet.
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