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Volume 15 Issue 7 (Suppl)

Oral Health Dent Manag 2016

ISSN: 2247-2452, OHDM an open access journal

Oral care and Probiotics-2016

November 14-16, 2016

17

th

World Congress on

November 14-16, 2016 Orlando, USA

Oral Care and Probiotics

Oral Health Dent Manag 2016, 15:7(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2247-2452.C1.040

An audit to assess the frequency and severity of accidental allergic reactions in cow’s milk allergic

children

Loise Wang’ondu

1

and

Rachel Deboer

2

1

The Technical University of Kenya, Kenya

2

St. Thomas Hospital, London

Background:

Milk is the 2nd most common allergen after Peanuts and the annual frequency of accidental allergic reactions in recent

studies from Spain and USA has been shown to be 34-40%. The AAR severity is dependent on food allergens and history of atopic

diseases such as asthma, eczema, hay-fever and recurrent wheeze.

Objectives:

To evaluate the frequency of accidental allergic reactions in the UK in a two-month audit thus observe variation depending

on geographical distribution, determine the risk factors that would affect the severity of clinical characteristics and circumstance

where the reactions occurred.

Methods:

A structured interview using a standardized questionnaire on 62 patients (35 male and 27 female; median age 67 months).

The questions entailed; the number of accidental reactions and where they occurred, the severity of the reactions, other food allergies

and risk factors such as asthma, hay-fever, recurrent wheeze and eczema. The symptoms were classified as mild, moderate and severe.

The previous and current skin prick test was also recorded.

Results:

The annual AAR frequency was 57%. 37 (60%) children had 51 accidental reactions in the past year (43%mild, 19%moderate

and 38% severe). 60% of the reactions took place at home and Piriton was the major mode of treatment (79%). Three reactions were

anaphylactic and the children were rushed to hospital where epinephrine was administered (Epipen injections). Oral was the main

type of exposure (89%) and products containing milk were the main types of food (51%). 48% of patients who had a wheal size above

the median had moderate to severe symptoms.

Conclusions:

Accidental allergic reactions are frequent in children and this was brought about by, contamination, mislabelling,

change of recipes by companies, misreading by caregivers and direct milk intake. The risk factors for AAR severity were hay-fever,

Peanut allergy, having more than one atopic disease and the current wheal size (p-value <0.05).

loise.wang

’ondu@hotmail.co.uk