Think it's "just asthma?" THINK AGAIN-- could be peanuts.

Started by CMdeux, May 18, 2015, 10:07:29 AM

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eragon

Its OK to have dreams:one day my kids will be legal adults & have the skills to pick up a bath towel.

LinksEtc

You know, I get what the allergists are saying about testing and I agree.

On the other hand, I know there are many patients falling through the gap of "pure asthma" & "asthma-like symptoms that are really a food allergy reaction".  Docs get confused by this, paramedics get confused by this ... of course, patients are confused about this.

I think it's good for pulmos to be on the lookout for "asthma" that is accompanied by other possible FA symptoms or "asthma" that seems to occur with ingestion of certain foods & refer those patients to allergist, possibly prescribe epi/educate until patient can be seen by allergist.  Raising awareness of this among pulmos is a good thing.

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For those diagnosed with both FA & asthma ... my non-expert opinion from a patient perspective is that coordinated asthma/FA action plans would help patients greatly.  Not all deaths can be prevented, but too many patients & other carers like schools are not being educated enough about how "anaphylaxis can look like asthma".

Will be happy to post info that goes against this opinion of mine if I learn of diff info/perspective.   

:hiding:



Wondering if I can bring one of these  :hiding: to dd's next allergy appt.




Macabre

DS's first ana reaction at school presented as asthma that would not resolve with meds.  Luckily that spaciness symptom kicked in, and DH told the nurse to give DS the epi.

It was one of those brilliant Anaphylaxix Grading Chart Moments.

Then eight hours later, he had a biphasic reaction with stomach symptoms, chest pains if I remember right and hives if I remember right.  But first--asthma.
DS: 🥜, 🍤

CMdeux

Yes-- and Nathan Walters' fatal reaction presented as refractory asthma, too, if I'm recalling details correctly.

DD has had a few reactions like that-- the most recent was the one in Paris.  It was super-freaky to not KNOW whether you were dealing with asthma-- and if so, why meds weren't doing anything for it-- or something else. 

Resistance isn't futile.  It's voltage divided by current. 


Western U.S.

LinksEtc

This is a little off-topic for this thread, but related enough I think to the general asthma/FA topic ...

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For those with confirmed asthma & FA ....

there is a different risk/benefit calculus ... there are different questions at play than when dealing with only 1 of those conditions.

Ex -


Is this asthma or ana?  At what point (when unsure) should the decision be "better safe than sorry" and give epi?  Shouldn't the criteria used to interpret lung symptoms be written into the plans?

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I used to do some computer programming.  A patient with both FA & asthma going through the motions of following a typical asthma action plan reminds me of a program where there is the potential to get stuck in a loop ....

sometimes you need to direct things to go to another part of the program (in this case, point the patient to the food allergy action plan according to criteria that the allergists define) .

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Same sort of thing here ...

Re: Standard Protocol for "Asthma Action Plans"
"Lessons for management of anaphylaxis from a study of fatal reactions"
R. S. H. PUMPHREY

http://medicina.med.up.pt/im/trabalhos05_06/sites/Turma21/artigos%20-%20WEB/tiburcio%2017.pdf

Quote
Because all food-related reactions caused difficulty breathing, the paramedics commonly had difficulty deciding whether to use the protocol for anaphylaxis or for asthma. This led to delayed or inappropriate treatment that may have contributed to the fatality.

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I think sometimes people like to divide asthma & FA with a big line ... but I think the reality might be more complicated ... a more integrated approach might work better ... & it will benefit patients if allergists & pulmos can work together & coordinate patient care.

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:hiding: ... I got going on my favorite FA topic besides sesame ...  will.stop.now







LinksEtc

Back to "links" ...


"Asthma-Peanut Sensitivity Study Questioned By Allergists"
http://www.allergyasthmanetwork.org/asthma-peanut-sensitivity-study-questioned-allergists/?utm_source=May+E-newsletter%3A+30th+Anniversary+Recap+%2F+Asthma-Peanut+Sensitivity+Study&utm_campaign=May+E-news&utm_medium=email

Quote"Many of the respiratory symptoms of peanut allergy can mirror those of an asthma attack, and vice versa," Dr. Cohn says. "The study aimed to evaluate the proportion of children with asthma who also demonstrated a sensitivity to peanuts."

CMdeux

I think sometimes people like to divide asthma & FA with a big line ... but I think the reality might be more complicated ... a more integrated approach might work better ... & it will benefit patients if allergists & pulmos can work together & coordinate patient care.



^WORD.   :yes:

IMO-- this is no time for a turf war, guys.  There's enough trouble here for two groups of specialists.

Thanks,

~The patients and parents who live with this kind of reality.

Resistance isn't futile.  It's voltage divided by current. 


Western U.S.

spacecanada

Exactly what I'm thinking, Links!  The two may be integrated more than medical professionals currently perceive.  Whether the initial article is something to stand on or not isn't in question, it's that it shines light on the fact these two can, and often, coexist and one may be a diagnostic tool in figuring out the other.  Just like when the doctor asks about asthma triggers being exercise, illness, environmental allergies, etc. they may wish to consider adding food/eating to the list.  It's not a big step to take and it could save lives.  If they answer no, carry on like usual.  But if the patient suspects their asthma gets worse after eating, even just sometimes, then yellow flags should go up.

Action plans should have clearer asthma guidelines on them too and perhaps the big allergy organizations could talk to the pulmologists to come up with very basic guidelines.  It's not too difficult to say that if asthma symptoms do not improve with rescue medications within X minutes, give Epi.  (And by X, I mean a very small number, like 1, or the shortest time possible for the meds to work, to a limit.)  If symptoms worsen after giving rescue meds, give Epi.  Honestly, I might even Epi someone with known food allergies and asthma without trying asthma meds unless there was an obvious asthma trigger.  Better to Epi than not. Sorry, getting off topic there a bit.  I'm fond of this topic too, Links. ;)
ANA peanuts, tree nuts, wheat, potato, sorghum

LinksEtc

Quote from: spacecanada on May 22, 2015, 07:08:46 PM
I'm fond of this topic too, Links. ;)


:)



Just a reminder to those reading ... if you have questions about the info in this thread or your FA and/or asthma action plans, talk to your allergist and/or pulmo.

LinksEtc

This isn't about the article in this thread, but interesting to see testing talked about on twitter ...

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Tweeted by @GoAllergy   (George du Toit - 1 of LEAP study docs)
QuoteI disagree with this indication I.e. react first, and only then undergo allergy testing, seems unnecessarily tough! twitter.com/aaaai_org/stat...



@AAAAI_org
QuoteIgE testing should be done for a food only if there is history consistent w/ reaction after eating that particular food.





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