FRIDAY, Aug. 3 (HealthDay News) -- Emily Kloser wasn't too
concerned when her son's doctor first told her he had signs that
pointed to a future with allergies.
What the Vail, Colo., mom didn't know at the time was just how
serious those allergies would be.
Kloser's son, Christian, ended up developing life-threatening
allergies to eggs, milk, soy, wheat, peanuts, seeds and tree nuts.
The first significant sign of an allergy came the first time he had
an egg and he broke out in hives.
"It was obvious that he had lots of food allergies," Kloser
said. "He'd often have a runny nose and blotchy skin."
Once Kloser and her husband, Mike, learned just how many things
Christian was allergic to, the real challenge began. "I had to
relearn how to cook," Emily Kloser said. "I now read every label,
every time. Even though you have a brand you trust, sometimes they
change how they make things."
Because her son developed allergies at such a young age, Kloser
said he didn't really know what he was missing and seemed to deal
with it just fine. In fact, she said, when she'd make rice cereal
treats for him to have at other children's birthday parties, the
other children would often ask if they could have what Christian
was having instead of the birthday cake.
At about age 5, she said, Christian outgrew his allergy to
wheat, and a short time later he was able to eat eggs again. Around
age 7 or 8, he was able to start drinking milk and eating dairy
foods. Perhaps not surprisingly, one of the first foods he wanted
to try was that ubiquitous kids' meal: pizza.
Now 18, he's still allergic to peanuts, seeds and tree nuts and,
possibly, shellfish.
But just about the time Christian was outgrowing some of his
allergies, his older sister Heidi had an allergic reaction after
eating an avocado. Soon after that, they learned that she was also
allergic to walnuts.
Both of the Kloser children are competitive skiers, and the
family has traveled the world, despite the challenges of living
with such serious food allergies. Emily Kloser said she learned to
pack certain foods that her kids would need, and she learned how to
ask about how foods were prepared in different languages so she'd
be ready when they were away from the United States.
She said that living with the kids' food allergies "really made
us all healthier" because it was easier to eat in than to eat at
restaurants.
But it isn't always smooth sailing. Just a couple of years ago,
Christian was traveling with a coach to a competitive ski event and
was inadvertently exposed to something he was allergic to. They
suspect it was a peanut exposure. He was back on the mountain,
skiing downhill, when he started to feel badly. He didn't have
antihistamine medication or an epinephrine injection with him to
counteract his allergies, like he usually does, but his coach got
him quickly to a hospital, though it took hours for Christian to
get back to normal.
Still, Kloser said the family tries to live a normal life. "When
I first found out, I sobbed," she said. "I wondered how he'd go to
college, or even how he'd go to a friend's house. But you just have
to educate the people your children come into contact with, and
trust your children and the other adults in their lives. Have a
plan and stick to the plan if something happens. But, don't get so
in a panic over it that you start making your kid anxious."
More information
A companion article gives more detail on
kids' food allergies.