Pediatric Services

If your child needs surgical or complex medical treatment for illnesses or problems affecting the ear, nose, or throat, an Otolaryngologist has the experience and qualification to treat your child.

Do Otolaryngologists Treat Pediatric Patients?

Otolaryngologists are primarily concerned with the medical and surgical treatment of ear, nose, and throat diseases in children and adults. Otolaryngologists generally provide the following services to pediatric patients:

  • Diagnosis and treatment of ear, nose, and throat disorders, and head and neck diseases
  • Surgery of head and neck, including before and after-surgery care
  • Consults with other doctors when ear, nose, or throat disease are detected
  • Assistance in the identification of communication disorders in children

Services Dr. Morris Gottlieb Provides

Dr. Gottlieb trained at Duke Children’s Hospital, one of the top 5 children’s hospitals in the country, for Pediatric Otolaryngology. He specializes in pediatric care for a variety of conditions relating to the ear, nose, and throat. He performs many different procedures for pediatric patients including hearing evaluations, removal of tonsils, adenoids, placement of ear tubes, tongue tie release, etc.

Allergy Testing

Our facility is equipped to test for all common and general allergies. We also provide a full allergy clinic, which will administer prescribed allergy treatments for your convenience.

Are allergy drops effective for children?

Yes, in fact, children are the perfect candidates for drops. This is an essentially painless allergy treatment. As long as your child can hold the drops under their tongue for two minutes, they can benefit from Allergy Drops.

What are the advantages of Allergy Drops when compared to allergy shots?

  • No injection or pain. Unparalleled safety profile.
  • Time saved. Cut down time traveling to and from the doctor’s office as well as the 30 minutes of mandatory observation in the office.
  • Convenience. People who live far away from an allergist or who have busy schedules may find it difficult to visit the doctor every week for an injection. Allergy drops are fast and convenient because they can be administered at home.


Click Here for List of Medications to Avoid

FAQ’s About Allergy Testing & Treatment

Q. Is a blood test or fingerstick test for allergies as good as skin testing?
A. The fingerstick or blood test is very sensitive at not only detecting allergies but determining how allergic to things in the environment or diet you may be. On very rare cases, a patient might be negative on serum tests, but positive on skin testing.

Q. Do I need to stop taking my antihistamines or other allergy medicines before I get the test?
A. There is a detailed list of medications provided below that must be stopped prior to testing.

Q. Are there any side effects to the test?
A. No. the benefit of the test is that it’s more specific than skin testing for allergies, but does not have any risks, such as local or systemic reactions (anaphylaxis).

Q. What does it mean when the test says I’m a 4 on dust mites and a 2 for cats?
A. These tests reveal not only whether you are allergic to common environmental elements, but also quantifies each allergen on a scale from 1-6, with the higher the number indicating more sensitivity to that particular allergen. We use these differences to determine starting points for your allergy treatment.

Q. How do I decide whether or not to get on allergy treatment?
A. If you can control your allergy symptoms with a single daily medication with possibly the addition of a second allergy medicine during seasonal flare-ups, then you should utilize the test results and make environmental changes as necessary. However, if you need two or more medications seasonally or year-round, and despite these medicines continue to have break-through symptoms, you should consider immunotherapy.

Q. At what age can my child start immunotherapy?
A. Often, children are started on allergy treatment too soon. Starting too soon is ineffective due to rapid immune system changes occurring in young children. Often, the child’s maturity level is not adequate for weekly allergy shots. We have found that allergy test results become more uniform from year-to-year in children between the ages of seven and nine. Children this age are usually mature enough to handle a weekly injection. With sublingual delivery of immunotherapy becoming a mainstay of treatment we are able to treat children earlier comfortably.

Q. My child has asthma. Should they be tested for allergies or receive allergy immunotherapy?
A. Yes. Of all the benefits of allergy treatment, the ability to impact the course and severity of asthma, especially in children, is one of the most compelling aspects of allergy treatment.

Q. My child has eczema, should I be tested for food allergies?
A. Yes. Although skin manifestations of allergies may or may not be IgE mediated, most children, especially infants, will have positive test results on allergenex/immunoCAP and benefit significantly from the information as a guide for their diet.

Q. My child has positive test results for food allergy and eczema/urticaria. Can they do shots, and if not, what can they do?
A. Children with skin manifestations of allergies need to be on daily AM antihistamines and daily PM antihistamines or Singulair; every day. They also need to adjust their diet to the lab findings. Immunotherapy is not recommended for food allergies, just avoidance.

Q. I know that I am allergic, but the test says that I have no allergies. How is that possible?
A. Well, it is not unusual for patients to be treated for allergies or have allergy symptoms, but not actually have IgE mediated allergies. This doesn’t mean that environmental elements can’t or don’t affect you; it just means your immune system isn’t sensitized to those elements.

Q. How long until I notice an improvement in my symptoms after starting my immunotherapy?
A. Most patients will notice a difference within 4-6 months, and all should benefit by 12 months. This assumes no break in therapy, so it's important that you do not miss your treatment doses.

Q. I had allergies as a child and was on shots for 3-4 years and did well until I turned 40. Now, they seem to be back. Is this possible?
A. Some patients who suffered from allergies as a youth and underwent immunotherapy will have IgE hypersensitivity return later in life. You can benefit again from immunotherapy as an adult.

Q. How does immunotherapy work?
A. The treatment contains varying concentrations of the exact allergens to which you are sensitive. By exposing your immune system to these allergens over time, and at increasing concentrations, your body will develop blocking antibodies that prevent you from reacting to the same allergens in the environment.

Q. Do these blocking antibodies last forever?
A. No. They will slowly decrease after you stop therapy. But, a deeper level of your immune system termed the T helper cells, which control the type of IgE your body makes, changes after you have been on shots for a few years which can lead to the permanent benefit, or cure, for your allergies.

Q. I read about a blood test that evaluates hundreds of substances in my diet or environment, but your test only looks at 30-40. Why is that?
A. The tests you are describing evaluate for IgG recognition of those substances. There is no evidence that IgG mediates any reactions in our bodies to those substances. It merely reflects that your body has been exposed to them.

Q. I have hives. Is it likely these are allergic in nature?
A. No. Patients with hives typically are negative on allergy assessment, except being an allergic food trigger.

 

Disclaimer:

The pictures displayed in this website are images of physicians, patients and employees who have consented to have their pictures in this website.


ENT SERVICES

We treat a variety of conditions including allergy problems, conditions of the nose, throat and sinuses, hearing problems, as well as head and neck issues. We are equipped to see all populations from pediatric to geriatric patients.

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BOARD CERTIFIED

Dr. Morris Gottlieb is board certified in Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery and is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons, a distinction that fewer than 1% of all surgeons hold.

American Board of Otolaryngology Certification seal READ BIO

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We are conveniently located in Richardson, Texas on the President George Bush Turnpike, just east of US75.

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