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Can Controlled Consumption of Non-Allergic Nuts Benefit Children with Nut Allergy? A Randomised Controlled Study.
Saturday, 1 January 2011
Children with nut allergy are usually advised to avoid all nuts. In a pilot study in 2009 we showed that these children can in fact safely eat the non-allergic nuts, after the latter are confirmed to be safe through a "multi-nut challenge test" performed under doctor's supervision. Benefits after 1 year of non-allergic nut consumption include improved psychological well-being, reduced skin prick reactions to both allergic and non-allergic nuts, and approximately 25% remission rate for the original allergic nuts. The proposed project is built on the experience of the pilot study and has a randomised controlled design. [View]
Can Controlled Consumption of Non-allergic Nuts Benefit Children with Nut Allergy? A Randomised Controlled Study.
Tuesday, 7 December 2010
Children with nut allergy are usually advised to avoid all nuts. In a pilot study in 2009 we showed that these children can in fact safely eat the non-allergic nuts, after the latter are confirmed to be safe through a "multi-nut challenge test" performed under doctor's supervision. Benefits after 1 year of non-allergic nut consumption include improved psychological well-being, reduced skin prick reactions to both allergic and non-allergic nuts, and approximately 25% remission rate for the original allergic nuts. The proposed project is built on the experience of the pilot study and has a randomised controlled design. [View]

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