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Sutter Auburn Faith Food Allergy Care

Food allergies don’t just limit what you eat. Severe food allergies can greatly impact the quality of your life. Learn how doctors help you manage food allergies so you can focus on living the life you love.

Girl holding peanut

Connect with an Allergist

Expert Food Allergy Care

Suffering from a true food allergy can not only be uncomfortable and inconvenient, it can be scary.

True food allergies are different from non-allergic food intolerances. Food intolerances are often limited to the digestive-system—like an upset stomach stemming from a lactose intolerance.

A food allergy is actually an immune-system response. When certain foods are eaten, the body mistakenly sees them as if they were harmful pathogens. The body responds by trying to fight the invading food, and this response results in the symptoms associated with an allergic reaction.

The most common foods that cause allergic reactions are peanuts, tree nuts (such as walnuts, pecans and almonds), shellfish, dairy and wheat. But you can have an allergic reaction to any food.

Common symptoms of a true food allergy include:

  • Itching in the mouth and/or swelling of the lips
  • Vomiting, diarrhea or cramps
  • Hives or some other form of rash
  • Tightening of the throat and trouble breathing
  • Drop in blood pressure

Medications may help reduce relatively minor allergic reactions, like mild rashes. But a major allergic reaction can send your entire body into shock, also called anaphylaxis, which can be fatal. Anaphylactic shock can obstruct breathing and shut down oxygen flow to vital organs of the body, including the brain.

Food allergies can be challenging to live with because until recently, the best way to manage a food allergy has been to avoid that food, or entire food category, altogether. In fact, depending on your medical history and the severity of your allergy, your doctor may still recommend avoidance as the best course of action.

People with severe food allergies may be advised to carry an epinephrine pens with them at all times. Epinephrine pens are small automatic-injection devices that contain epinephrine (also called adrenaline).

Epinephrine pens can be used to self-administer epinephrine in the event of an unforeseen, serious allergic reaction. If a major allergic reaction occurs, emergency medical care must be sought immediately, even if you’ve used an epinephrine pen.

However, a new approach to food allergy treatment is being pioneered in a partnership between Sutter Health and Stanford Children’s Health. In this approach, doctors work to desensitize people with severe allergies by carefully and slowly exposing them to small amounts, under medical supervision.

This advanced care, currently underway at California Pacific Medical Center, is giving hope to families who have had their lives put on hold because of serious food allergies.

Helpful Resources

Boy with peanuts

Food and Medication Challenge Testing

It’s possible to outgrow your food and medication allergies. Challenge tests help you determine whether or not you’re still prone to an allergic reaction—all while under the care of medical professionals.

Environmental Exposure Research

Sutter Health Environmental Exposure Research
Exposure research looks for ways to improve methods, measurements and models to assess and predict exposures of humans and ecosystems to harmful environmental stressors. Environmental stressors can include chemical pollutants, microbes and pathogens, physical agents such as land use, and processes such as alteration of wildlife habitat. Exposure research also provides the foundation for the development of approaches to reduce these exposures and safeguard humans and the environment.

Sutter Health Environmental Exposure Research Sutter Health Environmental Exposure Research

Services Near You

Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital Emergency Department

Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital Emergency Department

11815 Education Street

1st Floor

Auburn, CA 95602

(530) 888-4550

Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital

Sutter Auburn Faith Hospital

11815 Education Street

Auburn, CA 95602

(530) 888-4500

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