milk intolerance
Last reviewed 01/2018
Milk Intolerance
- both health care professionals and parents frequently use milk intolerance
to describe a whole host of symptoms most commonly seen in infants who are
fed commercially prepared formulas. In actuality, milk intolerance is a broad
and generic term that includes the more specific maladies of lactose intolerance,
cow's milk protein intolerance (CMPI), and cow's milk allergy (CMA)
- lactose intolerance
- a result of lactase deficiency and is a form of carbohydrate malabsorption
- when lactase is absent or deficient, hydrolysis of the sugar lactose is incomplete
- because it is osmotically active, the undigested sugar will pull
fluid into the intestine
- hydrogen and lactic acid, in addition to other organic acids, are produced when colonic bacteria act on the undigested sugar
- the combined osmotic effect of the undigested sugar and organic acids results in the passage of acidic diarrheal stools
- these stools can produce significant skin irritation and breakdown
- infants with lactose intolerance may also present with abdominal distension and vomiting
- cow's milk protein intolerance (CMPI), and cow's milk allergy (CMA)
- intolerance or allergy to cow's milk is more complex and less well understood
- Cow's milk protein allergy/cows' milk allergy
- defined as adverse reactions to cow's milk that can be reproduced
and are immune-mediated
- most common immune responses are immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated, cell-mediated (non-IgE), or the combination of the two
- defined as adverse reactions to cow's milk that can be reproduced
and are immune-mediated
- Cow's milk protein intolerance/cow's milk intolerance
- not immune-mediated
- said to be undefined because an immune component is not clearly identifiable (1,2,3)
- not immune-mediated
- definition of CMPI/CMI does not include the symptoms of lactose intolerance or the presence of incidental isolated GI tract infections
- children with CMA or CMI can present with a variety of clinical
features that are cutaneous, GI, or respiratory in origin
- most common cutaneous reactions include:
- urticaria, atopic dermatitis, angioedema, and contact rashes
- infants with GI reactions can present with various clinical
features including
- nausea, vomiting (including hematemesis), colic, diarrhoea, (including occult and frank blood), enterocolitis, colitis, constipation, and transient enteropathies
- respiratory reactions include:
- rhinoconjuctivitis, asthma, wheezing, laryngeal edema, otitis media, and anaphylaxis
- most common cutaneous reactions include:
- lactose intolerance
Reference:
- 1. Host A., Clinical course of cow's milk protein allergy and intolerance. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 1998; 9 (Suppl 11):48-52
- 2. Host A. Cow's milk protein allergy and intolerance in infancy. Pediatr Allergy Immunol 1994;5:5-36.
- 3. Wilson J. Milk Intolerance: Lactose Intolerance and Cow's Milk Protein Allergy. Newborn and Infant Nursing Reviews 2005; 5 (4): 203-207.