08 Jul
Posted by admin as Hypoallergenic Bedding
My 5 month old son has eczema. (I’m nearly positive) It is mostly on his forehead and the left side of his face. His doctor says it’s either allergies or eczema but has not diagnosed. She has pretty much shown no interest in it, much to my annoyance! I breastfeed him. (No formula at all) I read so much about eczema and what it could be caused by- I wash his clothing and bedding in hypoallergenic fragrance- free, dye- free detergent. He only wears & sleeps on cotton. I only bathe him a couple times a week and I slathered lotion on him several times a day, then tried aquaphor (similar to neosporin)
None of this did any good! So then I decided to be the guinea pig. I cut dairy out of my diet for two weeks. But I made sure my nutrition didn’t suffer, eating other foods with calcium & drinking soy milk. His face improved so much! I reintroduced dairy- two slices of cheese & a bit of sour cream later-Eczema returns in full effect. Can I take Lactase? Drink Lactaid? Only serious answers plz
6 Responses
mandyhornbeck1981
July 8th, 2009 at 8:47 am
1If milk is giving your baby eczema it’s probably a milk allergy. Lactose-free dairy products still have the whey and casein protein she’s allergic to.
You can go to this site to find "dairy" food that has no milk in it. If your local grocery store doesn’t have a particular product you want, you can ask the manager to stock it for you.
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/stevecarper/nondairy.htm
And as someone else said, babies usually outgrow their allergies by their first birthday. My daughter outgrew her milk allergy before she turned one and my son outgrew his three allergies shortly after his first birthday.
Rebecca C
July 8th, 2009 at 8:47 am
2You can get the lactose-free products, I do not think it’s a good idea to take lactaid though. You can also try Soy products as well. Keep in touch with the pediatrician though and be sure to note what you ate before each outbreak if they continue to occur. Remember that things like this could be milk allergy, not just a sensitivity to lactose and if it IS milk allergy, just avoiding lactose is not going to help at all! Talk with the doctor and make sure you know the facts about what they think it is for sure – lactose, milk, etc….
maegs33
July 8th, 2009 at 8:47 am
3It’s not the lactose that’s causing it, it’s the milk proteins. If it was a lactose intolerance, then your baby would have problems with your actual milk. Since it’s a sensitivity to the proteins in cow milk, lactase and drinking Lactaid won’t help–they don’t have the lactose but they still have the proteins.
The good news is that most babies outgrow it. I’d try dairy again in a couple months.
Aren’t you glad you’re nursing, can you imagine what you’d have to do for him to find a formula he could tolerate?
mleanne13
July 8th, 2009 at 8:47 am
4yes i had too my son didnt get dry skin he got bad gas and would scream for hours and u couldnt do nothing about it. i found there is just about milk in every thing. i ask a pharasic and she looked for me and said that i could take a lactaid pill but to do it every time i ate they have somethat last all day but she said not to trust them. so i took them when every i ate or even snaked. and he didnt have any prombles. my son has dry skin but he got that from his dads side of the family and i have to do something different every time he gets it to make it go away. it is not fun and he hates lotion i have to give him baths with oatmeal and not too long doc said just enought to wash him up then out of the tub and make sure water isnt to hot or u might have hard water we do and that doesnt help him. well good luck
josi
July 8th, 2009 at 8:47 am
5It is a milk protein allergy not a lactose allergy, so eating lactose-free products wouldn’t work. My daughter was the same way. She had a mild milk protein allergy. Some babies have much more severe reactions such as vomiting, diarrhea, etc… and some moms even have to remove trace dairy from their diets. When I cut the major sources of dairy from my diet, her eczema cleared and she appeared not to have belly issues with it.
The good news is that most babies will outgrow a milk protein allergy. I was able to eat increasing amounts of dairy as the months went by without a reaction. We tried my daughter with yogurt at 8 months and she had mucous in her stool, but no other belly issues and the eczema didn’t come back. By 11 months she was able to tolerate both cheese and yogurt without a reaction.
I know it’s hard to cut out the dairy when you are used to it, but just hold off for a while and try to slowly re-introduce it into your diet. Where your son’s reaction isn’t severe, you’ll probably be able to eat small amounts again soon. Best of luck!
Here is a kellymom page for more info:
http://www.kellymom.com/babyconcerns/food-sensitivity.html
HMako
July 8th, 2009 at 8:47 am
6I’m not sure that you drinking Lactaid will help because it sounds like he’s allergic to the milk protein.
I had a VERY colicky baby for 12 months because he was allergic to milk protein. The only thing that helped was getting him off milk when he was 12 months old. We give him oat and rice milk now and he does great (no eczema). However as soon as he has any milk products, he gets an eczema outbreak.
Good news is I found a product I can apply to the outbreaks and they disappear in 24 hours. I love the product! When my son is starting to get an outbreak behind his ears, he will come to me and ask for the product because he knows it works. If you would like information/samples of the products let me know.
Good luck!
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