Quote from: twinturbo on November 22, 2013, 11:31:00 AM
We RAST (or if you want to call it IgE test) with the one kid on daily Zyrtec. For SPT he goes off Zyrtec but for oral challenges he actually stays on Zyrtec because it doesn't alter threshold all that much. Doc also reasons since he's on daily Zyrtec it is a more valid test than if he went off anti-histamine for a challenge.
The one thing I would look into given your allergen set is high heat treated milk. That has some validity to it that is somewhat of a treatment that also affects quality of life, and possibly positively influences contamination thresholds for untreated milk. Good, solid data on that one as long as you have an up to date doctor and adherence as an adult. I think there is some validity to dampening down your allergy cup through environmental allergy immunotherapy which is well established.
In essence you can't do much about the shellfish and almond but there are some adjunctive allergy issues that can be attacked with a great statistical likelihood of success that can translate into a better overall outcome.
Quote from: CMdeux on November 22, 2013, 11:03:40 AM
Yes-- antihistamines have no impact on circulating levels of IgE.
Quote from: CMdeux on November 22, 2013, 10:35:08 AM
Some people just historically don't skin test very reliably, too-- if you're one of them, then it makes much more sense not to bother and just go with RAST and history.
Quote from: lakeswimr on November 22, 2013, 07:28:58 AM
I agree with CM. I hope you find a great allergist. And I could be wrong but I think you can get RAST tested without going off meds. Our doc is not big on RAST and does skin usually but I think that's the case. Testing is not the be all and end all but it can be helpful. But it isn't necessary. If you walked into most allergists and described your past reactions they would give you a script for epis and emergency plan.
I can't remember your whole story but if you are having some mystery reactions testing via RAST could help you figure out the cause and so could in office challenges.
I would want the very best allergist I could get if I were you. Best wishes!
Quote from: twinturbo on November 21, 2013, 08:40:41 AM
Nothing much to add just in to wish good luck, hoping this is your 'prince' after the frog. For me I always feel like I don't have time to deal with my own personal allergies when there's so much I have to do. The paradox of a mother's self-care.
Quote from: SilverLining on November 21, 2013, 05:39:30 AM
This might seem obvious, but I don't see it mentioned here.
If you are taking any antihistamine, if possible stop. If the doctor wants to do any testing you have to have it out of your system for a certain amount of time. (Sorry, I don't remember how long. An week?)
That includes any other meds that have antihistamine in them...certain colds meds, and gravol (anti-nauseant, not sure of US name or if it's a different med there.)