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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Overall nutritional strategies
- Breastfeeding a baby with CMA
- Management of CMA
- Other mammalian milks (1)
- Other mammalian milks (2)
- Plant-based beverages (1)
- Plant-based beverages (2)
- Protein digestibility
- Other considerations: ingredients
- Factors to consider that may indicate a toddler is ready to transition to a plant-based beverage
- Present and future
- Future research
- In summary
- Thank you
Topics Covered
- Nutritional strategies
- Management of cow’s milk allergy (CMA)
- Other mammalian milks
- Plant-based beverages
- Protein digestibility
- Future research in CMA
Links
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External Links
Talk Citation
Venter, C. (2024, June 30). Cow's milk allergy: management [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 20, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/YYLL6473.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Carina Venter has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Cow's milk allergy: management
Published on June 30, 2024
17 min
Other Talks in the Series: Periodic Reports: Advances in Clinical Interventions and Research Platforms
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Finally, we will talk about
the management of
cow's milk allergy.
0:07
The overall nutritional
strategies.
0:12
Breastfeeding a baby
with cow's milk allergy
and what to do in terms
of the maternal diet
is probably one of the
biggest debated areas
in food allergy.
This is a paper, again,
written by the DRACMA
guideline group
with Vicki McWilliam
as the first author.
They highlight the fact that
there are many
debates about whether
we should ask the mom
to take milk out of her diet
if a child is presenting with
cow's milk allergy while
being breastfed and
that we probably do not
have the correct answer.
But what we do know is that
if we ask the mom to take
milk out of her diet
and the symptoms get better,
we need to ask the mother to
reintroduce cow's milk
back into her diet
after a two to four-week
period of exclusion.
She needs to consume cow's milk
for at least one week to see if
the symptoms reappear.
If the child had improved by
taking cow's milk out
of the mom's diet and
then the symptoms recur when
the mom reintroduces
the milk into her diet,
that is normally
when we can make
a diagnosis of cow's milk
allergy while being breastfed.
We then need to ask
the mother to avoid
the milk from her diet
for a period of time.
We really need to discuss
that avoidance as well
as reintroduction plans
with mothers very clearly.
We can consider
maternal elimination diets
during breastfeeding in
children with IgE-mediated
cow's milk allergy
only if the infant
is symptomatic
on breastfeeding alone.
In non-IgE-mediated forms
of cow's milk allergy,
if the history and
examination suggest
that the child may have
cow's milk allergy via
the milk consumed by the
breastfeeding mother
or in infants with
moderate to severe
eczema/atopic dermatitis
who are not responding
to optimal use of
topical steroids and
are sensitized to
cow's milk protein.
A very nice paper summarizing
all the complexities but then
giving very clear advice on
avoidance, reintroduction,
and which three
groups of children
one could consider for
maternal avoidance
of cow's milk while
breastfeeding.