The First World Diagnosis of Allergy by Arnaldo Cantani in GJARM - Juniper Publishers
The first world diagnosis of cow’s milk allergy (CMA) has been made in
six critically ill children, aged a few months, admitted to the
Department of Pediatrics of the Roma University in 1974-75 and recovered
in our ward, because afflicted with “intractable” diarrhea and fed
parenterally who were first world diagnosed by us. CMA is a severe even
perinatal disease [1]. The infants were parenterally fed with all the
necessary alimentation. By reviewing their charts, in a shabby chamber
which resembled the cottage of the twin’s founders of Rome, so science
was highlighted, we read that among their feeding there was the casein
[2]. Then the destiny knocked at our door. We looked at our
documentation, we were astonished. The casein was the most severe cause
of allergy, due to cow’s milk (CM) [3]. It was also the birth of
pediatric allergy and immunology science. For a complete nutrition they
were also fed with casein in the ward, therefore the diarrhea persisted
and aggravated continuously.
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