cough

Lily (9 years old)

She ate a peanut at family party. Had had crunchy peanut butter lots before this. Turned hoarse and swollen face. It was very clear we were in trouble, the developed a persistent cough en route to the hospital it was clear her airways were blocking. She was put straight to Resus at the emergency department. Allergy diagnosed and referred to kids allergy clinic for further tests.

We are in Northern Ireland where resources seem behind the times. No support groups etc. our clinic team does their best but most info has been found through Google. Anaphylaxis UK is useful. Following others on Instagram has been a source of support but the accounts are mostly based away from the UK.

BumbleBee (5 years old)

My daughter was colicky from birth, but the truth is colic is diagnosis literally determined by how much your baby cries. 

So I could she was in obvious discomfort all the time, and not just crying out of tiredness or something easier to solve. I would go to the GP, even ended up in A and E, when I did not know what else to do about a baby who was crying non-stop. She was exclusively breastfed. I soon realized one day when I had consumed a lot of cow’s milk, a day when she was especially upset, that maybe this was linked. Throughout the remainder of her first year I cut out milk from my diet (as much as I could). This significantly helped, but didn’t solve it all.

At the age of 3, she started throwing up after eating apples. I initially put it down to choking on the apple skins, but then it just became too instant; a bite of an apple, and then immediate vomiting. We spoke to the GP who sent us for an allergy blood test. 

Her list of food allergies was 3 pages long, apples and Milk being amongst her most severe.

She has not grown out of the allergies, but now we are much more aware of them. We are now aware coughing is her first obvious sign. If my daughter eats something and then starts coughing aggressively and for longer than a few seconds, we add that food to the list of no, no’s. She uses an epipen and antihistamines as and when needed.

I don’t use any websites but there is amazing child allergy community on Instagram, which I frequently learn ideas from.