T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4996.1 | | TENAYA::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Tue Oct 08 1991 14:59 | 7 |
| You might see if Seldane helps. Perhaps you could explain the
situation to your doctor and get a prescription for a "trial run" with
a neighbor or friend's kitty. And then if you can adopt, do it with
the understanding that it will be initially on a trial basis to see if
you can tolerate the cat. perhaps Priscilla at the Pat Brody shelter
would be willing to set up an adoption like this?
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4996.2 | Pass the tissues quickly... | SOLVIT::IVES | | Tue Oct 08 1991 15:34 | 24 |
| Nancy -
I have a niece who year ago was allergic to our cats and had the
very symptoms you described. She finally did get shots so she
could come and visit us without the terrible reaction. As the years
passed she stopped talking the shots and was fine but then a year
ago we added another cat and now poor Elizabeth is so miserable when
she comes to visit us.
I have given her one of my seldane tablets to help with the runing
nose and watery eyes but she still sneezes awful. The doctor said
the answer would to go back on the shots but she said, I will take
my chances and make my visits shorter. They have a dog and she has
no problem so it is definately the cat/cats.
I wonder how the allergy shampoo would work. I guess you need to
know if it's the hair/fur your allergic to or the saliva deposits
they get on their coats from washing themselves.
Maybe visit an animal shelter and see if they would let you take
an animal with the stipulation if it didn't work out you could
bring it back and get your money back.
Barbara
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4996.3 | | CECV03::GASKELL | | Tue Oct 08 1991 17:42 | 11 |
| Did you just start having a reaction to cats? I have lived with cats
for 47 years, but for some reason this year I have started to react.
For me, it's the rag weed and goldenrod pollen that catches in their
fur when they are out hunting. They bring it back home and I'm one big
Achooooooo. (I get the same problem from my own hair if I walk through
a patch of offending weeds, unless I wash my hair right away.)
I'm going to have to find a way to live with it though, I couldn't give
up my babies.
Hope you find a solution--best of luck.
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4996.4 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Tue Oct 08 1991 17:48 | 17 |
| Some people build up immunity to an allergen that is always present in
their environment. This is true with Ken. He used to be allergic to
cats, but has been tested for them again lately and is not allergic to
them anymore. (this happened over 10 years of living with them, not
overnight)
This is the reason why some people are not allergic to their own cat,
but have reactions when they visit cat owning friends.
Having an indoor cat would reduce the allergen since the cat wouldn't
be bringing in pollen and other allergens on it's fur. Also, keeping
the cat bathed would help reduce the dander and hence the allergen.
To find other topics on allergies, type "show key/full allergy" at the
notes prompt.
Jo
|
4996.5 | My allergies | AUKLET::MEIER | 1 cat, 3 kittens, and 1000 glass insulators | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:18 | 20 |
| I had never had allergy problems with cats, and even lived with them
on occasion, until one day, when my then-inlaws got a new kitten, which
I cuddled all Christmas Eve. I had to stay home Christmas Day in
terrible agony :-(. Ever since then, I've had problems. When we
adopted Bill's mother's cat, it was a trial arrangement; if my
allergies were too bad, we would try to place him through FELINE.
Since then, I've suffered quite a bit. I took over the counter stuff
until I finally broke down and saw an allergist; it turns out I'm
allergic to lots of things, including cats, and have been on medication
(and more recently allergy shots) ever since. I'm still not perfect,
(everyone who knows me knows about my coughing :-)) but at least I can
breathe (especially at night, which is always; worst). And it's not
just at home, so I can't just blame the feline population.
It comes down to "what are you willing to do in order to live with your
cat(s)?", and that's not meant to imply a right and wrong answer. If I
have children, I hope they take after Bill!! :-)
Jill
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4996.6 | addendum.. | AUKLET::MEIER | 1 cat, 3 kittens, and 1000 glass insulators | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:22 | 8 |
| Oh, a couple of other things:
As others have indicated, there are things you can do (better house-
keeping, indoor pets, etc) that can lessen the affects of the allergen.
And, by the way, .0 (Nancy Bowers), you aren't from NJ, are you?
Jill
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4996.7 | Air cleaners with ionizers help a great deal | EMASS1::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:41 | 7 |
| In in house air filter (somthing like the Alpine described in the
note keyworded CONSUMER_REPORTS) might help. I'm not allergic to cats,
but am horrably allergic to certain kinds of pollen, and I've found
that during "pollen season" I feel a lot better since I got the air
cleaner.
Deb
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4996.8 | lukewarm baths | SPARKL::WITTING | | Wed Oct 09 1991 15:19 | 8 |
| I have read that people who develop an allergy to their cat(s) should
try bathing them once a week, minimum. Easier said than done,
probably, unless you start this routine when the cat is still young.
Do not use any soap, just lukewarm water. They seem to think that it's
the cat's saliva that people are most often allergic to, rather than
the dander. The saliva accumulates on the coat as the cat washes
itself, so a lukewarm rinse sounds like a good idea. Also, do not
allow the cat to lick you.
|
4996.9 | some suggestions | SRFCLB::RADAMS | | Thu Oct 10 1991 01:39 | 62 |
|
I just entered a note about this a minute ago and now I can't find
it... Anyway, like I said in the last note, I'm horribly allergic to
cats as well..
Before we were married my wife had two long hair cats. I couldn't even
go near her appartment. I would have the same reaction you had within a
minute or two.. after five minutes I had to decide if I wanted to leave
and live or stay and die.. I knew which people I worked with who had cats
because I could smell cat on them...
To make a long story short, I finally decided that cats where just too
cute to live without and that if I had to get shots I'd get them..
But as it turns out, I don't need shots. All I have to do is take a
little extra care when it comes to our two little demons and I'm all
set.. I've even got one sitting on my shoulders purring her brains out
as I write this..
What you need to do is this:
Decide on the kinda cat you want - preferably short hair.
Find a breeder for that kinda cat
Call them up and ask if you can come over and chat with a few
cats for a bit.. preferably show cats cause they seem to get
more baths than non-show cats.
See what happens
If it seems ok or you only have a mild reaction, see if you can
take one home for a few days and try it out..
If it works, then you have a kitty and you'll be happy.. if it doesn't
you'll know..
If you decide to keep the cat, do the following. I just cut these out
of my last note.. If you want the name of a breeder and some
suggestions on breeds, send me mail..
1) Give your cat a bath often. Once a week at least with a good baby
shampoo.
2) Rub on Allerpet/C after you bathe them. It isn't a shampoo but more
like a conditioner if you will.. It does help, quite a bit.
3) Wipe their faces and paws once a day. Cats, as you all know, have
their little noses in every corner of your house ever day and they
collect dust like mad! Wiping the dust off helps a lot.
4) Toilet train the cat or keep the kitty litter someplace where your
allergic humans won't be around it. A lot of the dust that will
cause problems for them comes from kitty litter. You could get one
of those no-dust litters, but the contents of all litter scares me.
Who knows how toxic the stuff might be.
5) Have a room where the cats cannot go. This will help if the
afflicted humans just have to get away.
6) Have the afflicted humans wash their hands and possibly faces after
handling the cats.
7) When someone starts sneezing, get out the allerpet/c.. It may just
be a placebo(sp?) but it certainly helps me..
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4996.10 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds DTN:297-2313 | Thu Oct 10 1991 09:12 | 13 |
| I have a lovely shorthair scottish fold who was just neutered who is
looking for a home. I just want $50 to recover the cost of neutering.
All my cats go on a trial basis.
I wanted to comment on Seldane and Hismanal (the newer and stronger
medication). Barbara mentioned giving her relative a Seldane when
she came over. These medications require a constant blood level to
be really effective. And they don't work very well if taken once
the symptoms start.
Seldane is very mild. I suggest a trial run of a month on Seldane
before you decide if it would work for you.
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4996.11 | | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Thu Oct 10 1991 13:23 | 3 |
| See note 3851 for more help on allergies.
Jo
|
4996.12 | Lots to think about... | TPSYS::BOWERS | | Tue Oct 15 1991 11:30 | 22 |
| Hi All,
Thanks for all the good ideas. Reading the various notes, especially
about cats bringing in pollen, made me realize that this allergic
reaction seems much worse in the spring and late summer/early fall.
I believe those are the times when the pollen is at it's worst. To
answer someones' question...this just started up about two years ago.
Both my parents cats (one is my former Quincy) are very outdoor cats,
and tromp through the brush all the time...I'm sure there are alot of
ragweed and other nasty pollen-carrying weeds where they prowl. Not
only did the cat allergies start up two years ago, but pollen allergies
as well. At some point in the season here (Massachusetts) there is
heavy oak pollen which leaves the yellow dust on everything. We have a
very large old oak tree at the corner of the deck, and this spring I
was miserable until the yellow dust was gone....so I'll bet the two
types of allergies are related.
Hmmmmm....more to think about.
And Jill, I'm not from NJ...Harvard, MA was my home town.
Nancy
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4996.13 | good luck | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Tue Oct 15 1991 15:50 | 15 |
| It would be a good idea to find a cat sympathetic allergist and go in
for some testing. My husband avoided this for years, because he was
afraid that he would be allergic to cats. When he had a bad asthma
attack and had to go to the hospital last year, I finally convinced him
to go. Turns out that his fear and hesitation were for nothing, as he
is not allergic to cats or dogs...he is just allergic to everything
else on the planet!! So, finding new homes for our cats and dog would
not affect his allergies in the least.
If you have asthma, an allergy is much more serious and can be life
theatening. This is something we have learned in the course of the
last year or so. So, you should take it seriously. Find a good
doctor, get tested, and then go on from there.
Jo
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