A peanut allergy is a reaction by your child's immune system to peanuts. Our immune systems normally respond to bacteria or viruses that attack the body. With a food allergy, the body's immune system attacks harmless things, such as the proteins found in peanuts. Peanuts are among the 8 foods that are responsible for most food allergies in children. The other foods include milk, soy, eggs, tree nuts (such as walnuts and cashews), wheat, fish, and shellfish. Many children grow out of food allergies to egg, milk, or soy, but it is rare to grow out of peanut or tree nut allergies.
Most healthcare providers warn not to feed your child shellfish and food containing peanuts and tree nuts, until age 2. If you have family history of allergies, some recommend waiting until 3 years.
If you think your child is allergic to peanuts or any other food, it is important to get a diagnosis from your healthcare provider or allergist. Symptoms can develop over several hours or be immediate and severe:
With peanut allergy, it is more common to have an allergic reaction called anaphylactic shock. This is a serious reaction that is sudden, severe, can involve the whole body, and is potentially life threatening. It can cause swelling of the mouth and throat, dangerously lower blood pressure, and cause trouble breathing. This type of reaction is a medical emergency. It is treated with epinephrine (a medicine that is given by injection), and requires a call, or a visit to the ER. Usually parents or caregivers of children who have severe allergic reactions carry their own shot kits, just in case of emergency.
Nuts such as walnuts, almonds, pecans and cashews grow on trees. Peanuts grow underground and are in the legume family. They are not considered to be a 'true nut.' About half of the people with peanut allergy are also allergic to tree nuts. Ask your healthcare provider if it is safe for your child to eat tree nuts.
The only treatment for a child with a peanut allergy is to completely avoid peanut and foods that contain peanut products. Many processed foods and restaurant foods contain peanut or peanut products. You will need to change the way you shop and prepare foods.
The first step is to learn to read labels and become familiar with ingredients that contain peanut products. Always ask about ingredients if you are not sure. Study the lists below to learn more about foods and ingredients to watch out for.
Ingredients to look for in food products
Hidden source of peanuts
Cross contamination is a problem when trying to avoid peanut proteins. It is common for peanuts to come in contact with other foods during processing and in preparation, even if peanuts are not part of the recipe.
Items that could be contaminated with peanut
When dining out:
Your child can still have a nutritionally complete diet. The primary nutrients found in peanuts are protein, healthy fats, fiber, vitamin E, magnesium, and folate. There are many other foods that contain the same nutrients as peanuts, so the challenge is not providing adequate nutrition, but to keep your child from unknowingly eating foods that contain them.
You can bake desserts from scratch or from mixes that do not contain peanuts. Some ice cream and chocolate companies make products without peanuts and that have been processed separately from those prepared with peanuts to eliminate the risk of 'cross-contamination.' This would be stated clearly on the label.