referral criteria from primary care - food allergy
Last reviewed 01/2018
Referral to secondary or specialist care
Based on the allergy-focused clinical history, consider referral to secondary or specialist care in any of the following circumstances
The child or young person has:
- faltering growth in combination with one or more of the gastrointestinal symptoms
- gastrointestinal
-
IgE-mediated non-IgE-mediated angioedema of the lips, tongue and palate gastro-oesophageal reflux disease oral pruritus loose or frequent stools nausea blood and/or mucus in stools colicky abdominal pain abdominal pain vomiting infantile colic diarrhoea food refusal or aversion constipation perianal redness pallor and tiredness faltering growth in conjunction with at least one or more gastrointestinal symptoms above (with or without significant atopic eczema)
- or not responded to a single-allergen elimination diet, or
- had one or more acute systemic reactions, or
- had one or more severe delayed reactions, or
- has confirmed IgE-mediated food allergy and concurrent asthma , or
- has significant atopic eczema where multiple or cross-reactive food allergies are suspected by the parent or carer
Referral for specialist advice is also indicted if either there is:
- persisting parental suspicion of food allergy (especially in children or young people with difficult or perplexing symptoms) despite a lack of supporting history, or
- strong clinical suspicion of IgE-mediated food allergy but allergy test results are negative, or
- clinical suspicion of multiple food allergies
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