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From peanuts to shellfish… Why are so many adults suddenly getting allergies?
Posted on May 13th, 2009 No commentsI found out myself, well into my 20s, that I could not eat hazelnuts. It was as an adult that I found out I could not eat one of my favorite snacks. Here is a story about another adult who finds herself allergic to foods she had grown used to eating without any issues.
When Edwina Galloway started to feel a strange knot in her throat after eating some peanuts, she tried to ease it by drinking tea.
Want to advertise with us? marc @ eatnutfree.comBut within minutes her throat was constricting and she was struggling to breathe. Her husband bundled her into their car and rushed her to hospital.
Fortunately, it was only a mile from their home in Sevenoaks, Kent; had it been much further, Edwina could have died.
‘By the time I got there, I was shivering and shaking as my body was going into shock,’ says Edwina, 48, who runs her own administration business. ‘It was terribly frightening.’
Edwina was suffering from anaphylactic shock – an allergic reaction which causes puffy lips and eyes, other symptoms such as vomiting and breathing difficulties as the air passages swell. Untreated, it can prove fatal within minutes.
Edwina was immediately given antihistamine, which eased her symptoms. She later underwent tests to see what had brought on such a violent reaction; the results couldn’t have been more surprising.
‘I was told I’d developed an allergy to peanuts and hazelnuts,’ Edwina recalls.
‘It was a real shock, as there is no history of allergies in my family, and I certainly had never had an allergy before.
‘In fact, my husband is a vegetarian and so nut roast had been a staple of our diet. This allergy just came on out of the blue.
‘Now I have to carry an adrenaline jab with me at all times in case I have a really bad reaction.
‘Luckily, that hasn’t happened yet, but the allergy has changed my life. I have to be incredibly careful about what I eat because it takes only a trace of nut to set me off.
‘I went to a friend’s house for lunch a year ago, and although she was very careful to prepare food without nuts there must have been a tiny hint somewhere because I took a mouthful and blotches started to come up on my face.
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Read on via From peanuts to shellfish… Why are so many adults suddenly getting allergies? | Mail Online.
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Delta urged to stop offering peanuts
Posted on May 13th, 2009 No comments
Want to advertise with us? marc @ eatnutfree.comMEMPHIS, May 9 (UPI) — Dr. George Flinn, a physician and Tennessee county commissioner, is asking Delta airlines to stop serving peanuts on its flights formerly flown by Northwest.
Delta began serving peanuts in late March, when it substituted its snack, food and beverage offerings for those previously provided by Northwest.
The Memphis Commerical Appeal reported Saturday that Flinn said he’s not allergic to peanuts, but his grandson is.
“It’s been absolutely proven that if someone who is allergic to peanuts is exposed to peanuts, they’re going to have anaphylaxis,” he said. “This can cause trouble breathing, possibly even death.”
Delta spokesman Anthony Black said the airline’s policy is to create a buffer zone three rows in front and three rows behind a passenger with peanut allergy.
But Flinn said that’s not good enough because some allergy patients can be affected by airborne peanut particles.
He said Northwest not only provided that, but the airline also would make courtesy announcements asking passengers not to break out their own peanut-based snacks while traveling on a flight with an allergic person.
He said his family has been forced to make alternative travel arrangements with his grandson since the snack offerings changed.
“Peanut allergy is the most common cause of severe allergic reactions in the U.S. and it tends to be a lifelong allergy. Further, the entire family of an allergic individual usually changes their plans to keep that person safe, thereby making the market impact of food allergies three to four times greater than the 12 million patients,” said Anne Munoz-Furlong, founder of the Food Allergy & Anaphylaxis Network.



