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In reply to the discussion: So, why the rise in peanut allergies anyway? [View all]laundry_queen
(8,646 posts)46. Well it's not totally anecdotal
Since many studies show breastfed babies have fewer allergies than formula fed babies. I mentioned my brother, another anecdote, but it doesn't cancel out the 'overall' right? Surely you know how science works. By the way, ironically enough, eating nuts in pregnancy has been linked to an increase in nut allergies, for some reason. So in this case, maybe the nut eating in pregnancy triggered something that couldn't be overcome by the breastfeeding. I didn't eat nuts at all during pregnancy because I simply couldn't stomach them. I ate tons of them after and while breastfeeding though.
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When I was a child, children on the high end of the autism spectrum were
Lydia Leftcoast
Apr 2013
#73
The mystery deepens: NO reported allergies to peanut-based Plumpy'Nut in Africa!?
reformist2
Apr 2013
#3
I don't think being "too clean" passes the laugh test. I don't think people keep their homes as
byeya
Apr 2013
#5
Thanks for the clarification. Study after study, published by reputable journals say washing
byeya
Apr 2013
#25
I don't think it's a matter of being too clean so much as all the chemicals sprayed around
hedgehog
Apr 2013
#27
some of the most popular trees for street planting in the last 40 years - forgot whatthey are called
bettyellen
Apr 2013
#40
In Japan, they planted cedar trees all over the place a few decades ago
Lydia Leftcoast
Apr 2013
#76
The high temperatures used for roasting (800 F) in the US may modify proteins
FarCenter
Apr 2013
#12
Also, allergies are poorly understood anyway. I developed an egg allergy in adulthood and so stopped
Brickbat
Apr 2013
#14
I worked with a scientist once who was convinced that all people were allergic to at least two
Godhumor
Apr 2013
#70
How odd. Makes me wonder if peanut-allergy kids are correlated with peanut-obsessed parents?
reformist2
Apr 2013
#79