Diagnosis and Treatment of Milk Allergies

By Cristina Olvera, published Jun 14, 2006
Published Content: 135  Total Views: 237,698  Favorited By: 15 CPs
Rating: 3.2 of 5
Milk is a nutrient fluid that is produced by the mammary glands of female mammals. It provides the primary source of nutrition for newborns before they are able to digest more diverse foods. Sometimes persons especially young children develop an allergy to milk. A milk allergy is the immune system's response to one or more of the proteins fund in cow's milk. Milk allergy is one of the most frequent food allergens. There are many protein allergens that cause allergic reactions. Casein and Whey are the two main components. Casein is the curd that forms when milk begins to sour, and whey is the watery part that is left after curd is removed. Cows milk allergy or CMA affects about two to seven percent of infants.

Symptoms that indicate a possible milk allergy include excessive colic, excoriated buttocks, recurrent diarrhea, rash, hives and eczema, vomiting and abdominal pain, chronic runny nose, nasal stuffiness, recurrent bronchitis, ear infections, recurrent "colds", sinusitis, fluid behind the ears, wet and wheezy chest, coughing, irritability, failure to thrive, anxiety, acne, ADD/ADHD, arthritis, canker sores, constipation, headaches, heartburn, indigestion, iron deficient anemia, irritability, irritable bowel syndrome, joint pain, lactose intolerance and osteoporosis.

There are three types of clinical reactions to milk allergies. In type one, the symptoms start within minutes of an intake of small volumes of cows milk. This mainly causes skin problems such as eczema or hives. Respiratory and gastrointestinal symptoms may also occur. In type two, the symptoms start several hours after an intake of a modest volume of cow's milk. There are mostly symptoms of vomiting and diarrhea present. In type three, they symptoms develop after more than twenty hours or even days after the intake of large volumes of cow's milk. Symptoms include diarrhea with or without respiratory and skin reactions.

Takeaways
  • There are three types of clinical reactions to milk allergies.
  • Diagnosis ranges in degrees of difficulty.
  • Medication is ineffective in treating this condition.
Did You Know?
The majority of young children will outgrow a milk allergy after avoiding milk for 12-18 months. Individuals who develop the allergy later in life will probably retain it.
Comments
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
 
Great Article. 3 of my children have asthma, which has been linked with the milk allergy and a host of other issues. I hope this can help someone out who's in the same boat as me, but doesn't know all this. :)

Posted on 03/14/2007 at 9:03:00 AM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
Most Commented On