| I AM NOT A DOCTOR OR OTHER HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONAL I looked into oral immunotherapy for tree nut allergies. There's a paper from 2022: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/all.15212 They did it in a few stages: 1. First three days: test the child with increasing amounts of cashew protein, until the child has a reaction. Use the amount ingested for that reaction, to determine the single highest tolerated dose (SHTD = the maximal amount of cashew protein each patient could tolerate). 2. Next 24 days: the child ingests the SHTD daily. 3. After that: every month, the dose was increased (I think at an in-person visit), and taken at home for the next 30 days. For #1, I looked at the amounts of protein they gave the child. Table S2 (in one of the supporting documents) shows how much they gave on days 1, 2 and 3. Of course they stopped increasing once the child had a reaction. If you convert the amounts of protein into equivalent numbers of whole cashews, then you get: - day 1: start with 1/1800th of a small cashew, increasing up to a fifth of a small cashew. - day 2: 1/5th small cashew, up to 2 small cashews - day 3: 2 small cashews, up to 22 small cashews 22 small cashews is about equivalent to what they want to achieve by the end of the therapy, i.e. if you don't have a reaction after eating that many, you won't have a reaction to a greater quantity. It seems a bit hard to DIY it, because: - The first three days requires very small amounts of cashew protein. At home we don't have either (i) isolated cashew protein, or (ii) tools to measure such small amounts (starting with 0.1mg cashew protein, or 0.5mg cashew). - For the first three days, we'd need to be very vigilant to watch out for a reaction. I don't know whether, in a supervised setting, they'd observe or measure other factors than just an apparent reaction, to make sure the procedure is safe. I AM NOT A DOCTOR OR OTHER HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONAL |
I have a tree nut "allergy" but doctors always call it more of a "hypersensitivity" because my reactions are usually involving terrible stomach cramps and pain accompanied occasionally by swollen throat (more so for almonds than cashews).
I've wondered if it's worth trying to do this myself.