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- <p>Feb. 23, 2015 -- Life-threatening peanut allergies have mysteriously been
- on the rise in the past decade, with little hope for a cure.</p>
- <p xmlns:xalan="http://xml.apache.org/xalan">But a groundbreaking new study may offer a way to stem that rise, while
- another may offer some hope for those who are already allergic.</p>
- <p>Parents have been told for years to avoid giving foods containing peanuts
- to babies for fear of triggering an allergy. Now research shows the opposite
- is true: Feeding babies snacks made with peanuts before their first birthday
- appears to prevent that from happening.</p>
- <p>The study is published in the <i>New England Journal of Medicine,</i> and
- it was presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Allergy,
- Asthma and Immunology in Houston. It found that among children at high
- risk for getting peanut allergies, eating peanut snacks by 11 months of
- age and continuing to eat them at least three times a week until age 5
- cut their chances of becoming allergic by more than 80% compared to kids
- who avoided peanuts. Those at high risk were already allergic to egg, they
- had the skin condition <a href="http://www.webmd.com/skin-problems-and-treatments/eczema/default.htm" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">eczema</a>, or
- both.</p>
- <p>Overall, about 3% of kids who ate peanut butter or peanut snacks before
- their first birthday got an allergy, compared to about 17% of kids who
- didn’t eat them.</p>
- <p>“I think this study is an astounding and groundbreaking study, really,”
- says Katie Allen, MD, PhD. She's the director of the Center for Food and
- Allergy Research at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne,
- Australia. Allen was not involved in the research.</p>
- <p>Experts say the research should shift thinking about how kids develop
- <a href="http://www.webmd.com/allergies/guide/food-allergy-intolerances" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">food allergies</a>, and it should change the guidance doctors give to
- parents.</p>
- <p>Meanwhile, for children and adults who are already <a href="http://www.webmd.com/allergies/guide/nut-allergy" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">allergic to peanuts</a>,
- another study presented at the same meeting held out hope of a treatment.</p>
- <p>A new skin patch called Viaskin allowed people with peanut allergies to
- eat tiny amounts of peanuts after they wore it for a year.</p>
- <h3>A Change in Guidelines?</h3>
-
- <p>Allergies to peanuts and other foods are on the rise. In the U.S., more
- than 2% of people react to peanuts, a 400% increase since 1997. And reactions
- to peanuts and other tree nuts can be especially severe. Nuts are the main
- reason people get a life-threatening problem called <a href="http://www.webmd.com/allergies/guide/anaphylaxis" onclick="return sl(this,'','embd-lnk');">anaphylaxis</a>.</p>
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