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About one and a half million Americans have severe allergies to peanuts – and 50 to 100 people die each year from those allergies.
Children with peanut allergies are particularly at risk for a life-threatening reaction.
Five-year-old Tiana came to the hospital after eating part of a muffin.
“She was making faces and said that her chest hurt,” says her mother, “and she said, ‘mommy I think this has nuts in it’ – and it was a banana-nut muffin.”
Tiana is allergic to peanuts. For some kids, exposure to even a few molecules of peanuts can create a dangerous situation.
“There are some children who are so sensitive to [peanuts] that just eating the M&Ms that are, the plain M&Ms that are made in the same factory as the peanut M&Ms, [and] they’ll have a reaction,” says Dr. Lonnie King of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
Tiana is having trouble breathing. She also has asthma. The danger in severe food allergies is anaphylactic shock – swelling in the mouth and throat that can choke off breathing.
“Sometimes, you never know how bad it’s going to be,” says Dr. King to Tiana’s mom, “so I think you did the right thing, getting her looked at – but I think she’s going to be okay.”
A medicated vapor helps to open Tiana’s lungs and airway. Later, when her breathing improves, she’s sent home.
The doctor says that, if your child has a peanut allergy, you need to keep an “EpiPen” handy at all times.
“The treatment is epinephrine, he says, “and there is a prescription for a self-injector, an inject-able epinephrine – that the parent or the patient can administer, and it can be life saving.”
Parents with peanut-allergic children also need to spread the word – that their child has a severe allergy.
“But it’s hard to do, and mistakes are made,” says Dr. King. “So if someone has a reaction, and you don’t have the epinephrine to inject that patient, if it is a severe reaction, you should call EMS.”
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