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Clofibrate allergy in children

A 38-year-old member asked:
Dr. Simon Kimm
Urology 18 years experience
Impaired elimination: All drugs that are taken are eventually metabolized and eliminated from the body. Although liver enzymes perform the bulk of metabolizing of these age... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 45-year-old member asked:
Dr. Linda Callaghan
Addiction Medicine 55 years experience
No.: There are no specific drug interaction between Lexapro (escitalopram) and Clofibrate.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 28-year-old member asked:
Dr. Maziar Rezvani
Allergy and Immunology 23 years experience
Not Exactly: What is passed genetically from parent to child is the propensity to develop atopy (such as eczema, asthma, allergic rhinitis, food allergies) but usu... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
Dr. Alex Martinez
Specializes in Allergy
Not exactly: The ability to react to certain proteins in an allergic way is passed on from parents to their children, but a specific allergy is not. So if a mom is... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
Dr. Joseph Cohen
Pediatrics 24 years experience
Not really: Genetic predisposition allergies are transmitted however they don't always manifest.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 41-year-old male asked:
Dr. Kristi Woods
Pediatrics 25 years experience
Sometimes: But not all the time. Nasal allergies are not a frequent cause of a really bad persistent cough. In a child with allergies and a really bad cough (ass... Read More
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A 37-year-old member asked:
Dr. Jeffrey Rumbyrt
Allergy and Immunology 34 years experience
No: The condition of being allergic is certainly an inherited property. Often, that tendancy is greater in children whose biological mother has allergies... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A member asked:
Dr. Arthur Torre
Pediatric Allergy and Asthma 53 years experience
Hereditary: The ability to have allergies is hereditary. If one parent has allergy, there is about a 40% chance of the child having allergy. If both parents are ... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 40-year-old member asked:
Dr. Anthony LaBarbera
Dr. Anthony LaBarberaanswered
Pediatrics 30 years experience
See below: They are tested the same as everyone else. They can have skin testing performed by an allergist, or blood work ordered by their primary care provider.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 27-year-old member asked:
Dr. Albert Pizzo
Family Medicine 62 years experience
Nut allergy: Maybe. Your children may have inherited genes from you that make them more likely to develop an allergy, but they do not inherit a specific allergy t... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 36-year-old member asked:
Dr. Maziar Rezvani
Allergy and Immunology 23 years experience
Depends: Several factors here. I usually never recommend it if the family is attached to the pet, but if it is causing severe symptoms, you should sequester t... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 38-year-old member asked:
Dr. Thad Woodard
Specializes in Pediatrics
No: The pain is minimal with skin testing, similar testing can be done with a blood test which requires some blood being withdrawn with a needle.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
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