Gold Coast mother Terran was getting ready to return to work when her six-month-old daughter first displayed allergy symptoms after drinking cow’s milk formula.
“As she drank the formula, I started to notice that the skin around her mouth had started to go red. Within half-an-hour her body was covered in hives. It looked as though she had 1000’s of insect bites. Her eyes had started to swell,” said Terran.
Terran with her daughter Coco. Image supplied.
The new mother rushed to the doctor, where her daughter, Coco, was given a steroid shot to relieve the symptoms.
"The hives slowly went down. The GP told me she had suffered an allergic reaction, but was unsure if it was caused by the dairy or another ingredient in the formula. He suggested I keep trying different formulas until I found one that she didn’t react to - advice which could have killed my daughter had I followed it," she said.
After seeing three different practitioners, the Gold Coast mother was referred to Paediatric Allergist and Immunologist Professor Pete Smith.
"We discussed her reaction, her mild eczema, her frequent vomiting and she underwent a skin prick test. I was expecting to be told that she had a dairy allergy, but were shocked and devastated to find out that she also had a large reaction to peanuts and tree nuts with milder reactions to dust, dogs, cats and eggs. We were given an overwhelming amount of information that day, and a script for two EpiPens," she said.
Coco, 10, is currently allergic to peanut, dairy, cashews, pistachios and cats and could suffer anaphylaxis if she ingested peanuts. She has outgrown her allergies to egg, most tree nuts, dog, feathers and grasses and has suffered badly from mosquito bites.