T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
87.1 | wild guess | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Thu Jun 28 1990 11:43 | 18 |
| I dunno if this is the same thing, but my grandfather used to get
these symptoms many years ago. His leg had been severely injured
in an accident when he was younger, the bone never did really heal
correctly, and because of that as he got older he had very reduced
circulation in his legs. Sometimes he got open sores all over the
lower leg.
What made me think it might be the same condition is that I
remember him sitting with his foot in a bucket of ice water and
having red blotches kind of like mosquito or deerfly bites all
over his leg.
He used to rub his legs with witch hazel to relieve the itching.
It helped a lot but had to be repeated every hour or so. I don't
know whether that's something that would be good while you're
pregnant, either.
--bonnie
|
87.2 | Sounds terrible.. | SALEM::EDRY | | Thu Jun 28 1990 12:18 | 14 |
| I don't know too much about this, but I thought I'd put in my two
cents. I know someone who had a baby recently (twins actually)
who came down with this terrible rash in her last trimester. It
was on her upper thigh on one side of her. The doctors just told
her there was nothing they could do for her, it was just something
that some people get late in pregnancy, and it would go away after
the babies were born.
This woman was rather large near the end she was carrying almost
16 pounds of baby. The only thing I can tell you is she had the
baby at a Cambridge Hospital, if your sister would like to contact
a doctor there. Sorry I can't offer more.
-Julie
|
87.3 | cream from Mother Care! | WILKIE::CERIA | into the void.... | Thu Jun 28 1990 12:28 | 7 |
| Hi,
My wife went through the same thing! It was due to something like the
skin stretching. She got some anti-itch cream form Mother Care at the
Pheasent Lane Mall in Nashua that she said did the trick!
Jeff
|
87.4 | Surprised at doctors' responses | SMAUG::RLAMONT | | Fri Jun 29 1990 11:21 | 15 |
| I would suggest that she call an allergist or look into seeing someone
at UMASS Medical Center in Worcester, or Memorial Hospital. They have
neonatal specialists there as well as great physicians with a "bevy" of
knowledge and talent for getting to the bottom of something.
I'm actually surprised that no doctor as this point would want to
research her problem more. Seems to me that saying "it's just
something you have to live with" is a strange reply for any doctor to
give anyone, pregnant OR otherwise.
For her own peace of mind, I'd keep trying to find herself a cure.
Best of luck
Rebecca
|
87.5 | Allergic Reaction to Pregnancy | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Fri Jun 29 1990 11:32 | 17 |
| I got this condition when I was pregnant with my twins, my first
pregnancy. I will never forget it, it was in my third trimester, in
November of 1984. The twins were born in December. It was at
Thanksgiving and some friends were giving me a baby shower at the time.
It was very similar to poison ivy, welts and itching. My OB diagnosed
it as an alergic reaction to the pregnancy, my dermatologist concurred.
It is quite uncommon, they don't know why the body reacts this way
occasionally, but it was definitely related to the pregnancy. They
treated it with cortisone cream, which helped somewhat, and wasn't
dangerous to the babies that late in the pregnancy. My OB said the
only way it would go away was to deliver the babies, I did, and it went
away.
I have been pregnant twice since then, and it has never reoccurred. It
was one of those fluke things that OB's simply still cannot explain.
|
87.6 | It was Everywhere! | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Fri Jun 29 1990 11:40 | 6 |
| By the way, I'm not talking the itch you get from your stomach
stretching. This was all over, everywhere. Arms, legs,
shoulders,stomach. I'm not surprised the doctors couldn't explain it
any better than an "allergic reaction". There are many things doctors
DON'T know yet about pregnancies and having babies!
|
87.7 | ME TOO !! | MAMIE::POULIN | | Fri Jun 29 1990 13:25 | 23 |
| In the third trimester of my third pregnancies I had an allergic
reaction to the plecenta. The itch sounds the same. It was all over,
legs, arms, back and stomach. The heat seemed to make it worse but
cold showers seemed to releive some of the itch. My OB said it would
go away at delivery and it did.
A freind of mine who worked with also had the same thing but a lot
worse. Her third trimester was June, July and August. Her OB (same
as mine) sent her to Dr. Stephan Levitt (603)880-4823 who is a
dermatologist. He diagnoised it as PUPS (stands for 4 huge latin works
which she couldn't remember) which is an allergic reaction to the
placenta. They don't know why it happens but in most cases the rash
will disappear upon delivery or in some rare cases it will linger on
for 2 or 3 months in nursing moms. He did specifically tell her not to
use cortazone (sp?) because it can be absorbed through the skin. She
had a perscribed cream that seemed to give her some relief.
Dr. Levitt did say that in most cases it will appear sooner in future
pregnancies.
Hope this helps a little.
Carole
|
87.8 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:13 | 10 |
| .4 > Seems to me that saying "it's just something you have to live with" is
.4 > a strange reply for any doctor to give anyone, pregnant OR otherwise.
I quite disagree. This is what doctors say 95% of the time. They just
usually disguise it to sound more sophisticated. Like "You're allergic
to pregnancy." Or "Ah, that's a virus that we're seeing a lot lately."
Or "Here's a perscription for an expensive equivalent of asprin." They
all mean roughly "Grin and bear it."
- Bruce
|
87.9 | Allergic to pregnancy? | DELNI::SCORMIER | | Fri Jun 29 1990 16:52 | 14 |
| I suppose your responses will put her mind at ease...I just hate to
tell her "Some women get it, and there's nothing you can do!" She
planned this pregnancy specifically so that her last trimester would be
in the winter months so she could run out in the snow when the itch got
unbearable : ) I guess she's lucky that it only cropped up on her legs.
A couple of you had it all over - talk about torture. She was itching
so badly towards the end that we were actually worried that's she'd
have some kind of psychological break-down. She resorted to scratching
her legs constantly with a hair brush, and got no sleep what-so-ever
the last two weeks of her pregnancy. Luckily she delivered two weeks
early. Thanks for the suggestions for doctors and/or hospitals to try.
Sarah
|
87.10 | Figuring out which third is the hard part | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Jun 29 1990 18:02 | 6 |
| There's a bit of common wisdom about medicine along the lines of
"A third of your patients will get better, no matter what you do;
a third will get worse, no matter what you do; and a third you can
help if you do the right thing."
-John Bishop
|
87.11 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Jul 02 1990 11:43 | 17 |
| .10 - that's a family doctor's equivalent of the fundamental practice
of triage. In disaster medicine (traditionally battlefields, but also
earthquakes, plane/train wrecks, etc.) there are only enough resources
(doctors, beds, ambulances, whatever) for a fraction of the injured.
The initial problem is triage - dividing patients into i) those who
will survive with little or no care; ii) those who will probably die
whatever is done for them; and iii) those for whom care may be
lifesaving. The groups (i) and (ii) are then ignored.
There's a slightly less depressing equivalent in hospital emergency
rooms, too (where we hope not many are abandoned as hopeless). There,
a nurse or doctor makes a quick determination whether i) to tell you to
go home, take two asperin, and call your doctor in the morning; ii) to
tell you to get ready for 4 hours in the waiting room before you are
examined; or iii) to start your IV and dispatch you to surgery.
- Bruce
|
87.12 | More itch | TROA02::BLOM | Here, because not all there | Thu Jul 05 1990 15:42 | 28 |
|
I tend to agree that often doctors don't know, and that it is important
to some research of your own if possible.
My wife had severe vaginal itch during both her last pregnancies.
The doctors reply was:
1. Lets try some cream (which did not help)
2. Too bad, it will go away after the pregnancy (we are talking
month 3 or 4 here).
After some research we found out that increased sensitivity occurs
a lot in pregnant women (you can call it allergie if you want).
(I mean sensitivity to products/things, although to people can apply
too, as most parents know).
Elimination of ALL SUGAR (sugar, cookies, icecream, etc) did the
trick. Easy, and the doctor did not appreciate our answer to the
problem !
(we found this answer in "our bodies, our selves", maybe not yuppie
anymore, but obviously still useful)
In the last pregnancy we dicovered also that bread can cause bad
cases of heartburn (switch to non-yeast bread).
The only thing I can say is: don't accept the "I don't know", it
often means "I don't think it is important". Maybe not to the doctor,
but it can make a world of difference to you.
Bart
|
87.13 | Heat treatment for allergic itching | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Fri Jul 06 1990 13:34 | 20 |
| Here is a suggestion for purely symptomatic relief of the condition you
described. I know of this as a highly effective treatment for temporary
relief of itching from poison ivy. I don't know if it would help with
your sister's problem, but it might, if it's the same sort of allergic
skin reaction.
Simply, the trick is to run hot water over the affected area, and then to
keep increasing the temperature until it is as hot as you can stand. The
itching will increase unbelievably; but it will end within five minutes or
so, and then you should have 6-8 hours of total relief.
Basically, as I understand it, this sort of allergic itching is mediated
by histamine, which is produced in mast cells in the skin. They release
more histamine when they are warmed (which is why your warmth makes the
itching worse). The heat treatment I described causes all the mast cells
to dump their entire load of histamine. Once they have been depleted,
it takes them some hours to regenerate it, and they can't cause any more
misery in the meanwhile.
-Neil
|
87.14 | SHE SHOULD WATCH HER DIET | WMOIS::D_SPENCER | | Thu Jul 12 1990 13:28 | 11 |
| My sister experienced the same thing during her pregnancy, except I
believe the rash appeared only on her arms. She found out (I think
from her doctor) that tomatoes, tomato products, and strawberries (and
maybe more foods - I don't remember), produced this allergic reaction.
As soon as she eliminated them from her diet, the rash was gone. The
allergy disappeared completely after the pregnancy. I don't know if it
was the Vitamin C or the acidity or what that affected her, but
nonetheless it worked.
Deb
|
87.15 | salicilate allergy | SHALDU::MCBLANE | | Thu Jul 12 1990 17:44 | 5 |
| RE: -.1
My grandmother is allergic to tomatoes, strawberries, most fruits,
preservatives and many other things. The allergy is to salicilates (sp?).
-Amy
|
87.16 | THE ITCHY ANNOYING RASH | POCUS::SCOHEN | | Wed May 15 1991 14:28 | 10 |
| I HAD A TERRIBLE CASE OF THE RED WELTS AND ITCHING. IT WAS UNBEARABLE
TO LIVE WITH FOR THE THREE (THANK GOD) DAYS I HAD IT. IT OCCURRED IN
ALL MY (AS THE DOCTOR SAID) "HOT SPOTS" UNDER MY ARMS, ON MY STOMACH,
ON MY CHEST, ON MY LEGS. I WENT TO A DERMATOLOGIST (RECOMMENDED BY MY
GYNO) AND HE SAID IT WAS FROM A DRASTIC CHANGE IN MY HORMONES. DURING
PREGNANCY, YOUR HORMONES ARE ON A ROLLER COASTER, BUT SOMETIMES A
DRASTIC CHANGE HAPPENS AT ONCE INSTEAD OF GRADUAL AND IT CAN CAUSE THIS
RASH. HE TOLD ME TO BATH IN AVEENO OATMEAL SOAP AND GAVE ME A TOPICAL
CREME THAT I CAN'T REMEMBER THE NAME OF (IT WAS A TYPE OF CORTIZONE)
AND IT WAS GONE WITHIN HOURS!
|
87.17 | It's driving me crazy! | ASIC::MYERS | | Tue Oct 08 1991 14:09 | 34 |
| Thank goodness for this notesfile! After reading the previous replies
at least I feel like I'm not the only one going through this. I've got
welts and itching (as well as bruises from the insatiable itching) from
my neck down to my ankles. I've had it for about a week now, it
started on my right hip and spread pretty quickly. My only difference
from the other noters is that I'm not in my 3rd trimester but in my
1st (8 1/2 weeks)!
After nearly scratching my skin off in a meeting Fri (it's so hard not
to scratch when it's all over) I called my ob and he said go see a
dermatologist and if he prescribes anything call me right back. He
recommended one near him, but since he's in Brookline, MA and I'm here
at FXO, I opted for the yellow pages to find something close by. I
managed to beg my way into an immediate appointment at a doctors down
the street, but was hugely dissapointed with him. Hmmm, have you been
near any poison ivy, no? Any change in soap, detergent, no? Well, I
don't know what it is. If you're still itchy next week come back and
we'll do a blood test and see if anything shows up, but I doubt it.
Meanwhile, take Aveeno baths, use this cream and try Benadryl. I think
your pregnancy is just a coincidence. Thank you very much that will be
$55.
I called my ob back and he ok'ed the Aveeno bath and the cream but was
hesitant about the Benadryl (just hearing that I said no thank you,
I'll pass on it). He was not happy about the doctor's nonchalant
attitude and wants me to see another dermatologist. So, I go on
Thursday (a whole 48 hours away!) and hopefully, I'll at least have an
idea what's causing this even if they don't have anything that I can
take.
Meanwhile, I sit here itching like crazy and naseaous to boot. I keep
telling myself that a year from now it'll all be long over.
Susan
|
87.18 | Should be going away now... | NEWPRT::WAHL_RO | | Wed Oct 09 1991 13:44 | 22 |
|
Susan,
I believe that the itching during the 3rd trimester is related to the
estrogen-dry-stretched skin syndrome. I've also heard of women
breaking out in hives right after delivery. Something about allergens
in the delivery process.
In your case, early on - it could be unrelated to pregnancy but the
treatment has to take your pregnancy into account. I had a rash from the
roots of my hair to toenails during pregnancy #1. After lots of dis-
cussion, we decided it was from swimming in a lake about 2 weeks before.
The doctors agreed on the treatment, Aveeno baths and Hydrocortisone cream
(1% solution). They couldn't really give me much else because of the
pregnancy. It did go away after about 7 days. If your rash isn't better,
I'd follow the dr.'s advice and see the other dermatologist.
Rochelle
BTW, prepare yourself for this winter's cold and flu season, your
treatment probably won't involve drugs either!
Rochelle
|
87.19 | try diet | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:52 | 10 |
| My sister experienced the 3rd trimester itching, and it was diagnosed
as a liver-related phenomenon. As soon as she delivered, the itching
stopped. The itch was aggravated by high-fat foods, so she restricted
her fat intake and it became somewhat manageable. Since pregnancy does
such strange (and wonderful) things to your body, I'd try doing an
allergy-diet test. Start keeping track of absolutely everything you
eat, and eliminate one (or one type) of food at a time. One thing my
sister found was that warmth aggravated her condition. She slept with
a fan on her feet and walked in the snow bearfoot to get relief!
Sarah
|
87.20 | Going to try another doctor. | ASIC::MYERS | | Wed Oct 09 1991 16:14 | 18 |
| Thanks for the responses. I've got another appointment with a
different dermatologist on Thursday. I'm definitely steering away from
taking any medication internally (only unless my ob says it's
absolutely, positively necessary) and am prepared to scratch and sit in
Aveeno baths for the next 7 months 8^(). I don't think this can be
attributed to being anyplace different within the past couple of weeks,
work has been horrendous and I'm here alot. I do think it could be
diet/pregnancy related, my body is now very sensitive to things it
wasn't before, like now I drink milk when I didn't before, etc. I'd
just like to know what it is I'm supposed to be avoiding and I will.
The first doctor didn't even seem interested in persuing it. This new
doctor came recommended by my ob and by the doctor's at my aunt's
office (Boston IVF) so I'll drive the distance and hope that this gets
me in the right direction.
Thanks for the support.
Susan
|
87.21 | ITCH FROM LIVER | MPGS::LUPIEN | | Thu Oct 17 1991 17:40 | 26 |
| Susan,
In the third trimester of my first pregnancy, I began to ITCH - not
stretch skin itch - my legs and feet - I tore them to ribbons
scratching - my Dr. sent me to a dermatologist and he said it was from
being pregnant - as the other noter said - it was from my liver,
something about pressure on the liver and the way it breaks down
material. The aveeno baths did not help me - he gave me a cream to
put on my legs and it helped somewhat. The itching went away right
after delivery. I was almost 8 months pregnant at the time - and
the dermatologist said I would be delivering soon (I thought he
was crazy) - he was right - I delivered about 2 weeks later!) Well,
I THINK I saved the empty bottle (it was prescription) - I'm going
to look for it - only this time the itching has started and I'm
only a few weeks along - not in the third trimester. If you want, I'll
post the name of the prescription he wrote up for me - I remember it
worked before - hope it works again, I think I'll be seeing him for a
re-write on the prescription. This guy is in Worcester and he was
very good to me when I went to see him. I have also heard good things
about him since then - if you're interested, let me know and I'll get
you his name and address. Hope you're feeling better soon!
Regards,
Sandy Lupien
|
87.22 | It's starting to go away | ASIC::MYERS | | Thu Oct 17 1991 18:44 | 33 |
| Sandy,
Thanks for your note. IT SEEMS TO BE GOING AWAY!!!!! 8^) 8^) 8^)
I went to see Dr. Ruth Tedaldi in Wellesley last Thursday and I thought
she was great. She had just had a baby, too, within the last year and
was very receptive to my not wanting to take any type of drugs. In
fact, she made a point of saying right away that anything she
prescribed would be safe for use during pregnancy, as well as that
nothing that was happening to me was hurting the baby (phew).
She said that it was a dermatitis due to the pregnancy, ie., I am
extremely sensitive to all these great hormones surging through my
body. It's not common at all (lucky me!) and it could last through the
entire pregnancy but there wasn't anyway that she would let me go
through the next months in this agony.
She prescribed Elocon and it helped within 2 days. She had me try it
on one isolated area first before prescribing it for all over use and
now I've got it in a vat sized prescription.
I still have occassional itching but nothing like those first horrible
10 days. Now I'm just waiting for the black and blue marks to go away
(I can't wait to hear what the doctor says to my husband tomorrow when
we go for my first visit and he see them 8^) )
Good luck to you! I know how terrible this can be and it's made worse
by knowing that there are only limited things that you can take to get
relief.
Hope you feel better soon.
Susan
|
87.23 | How 'bout Aloe Vera ? | RANGER::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Fri Oct 18 1991 02:11 | 11 |
| This may have been mentioned before, but I haven't looked at all
the previous replies... have you tried Aloe Vera? That's the
plant with thick juicy spear shaped leaves that is most often used
to help burns. Would it help with this itching? You can get it at
some health food stores - I have a bottle in the fridge for random
burns and such, and it works great for that - it may be worth
looking into, especially for those folks who already have a live
plant around..
- Tom
|
87.24 | itching | KAHALA::PALUBINSKAS | | Wed Nov 27 1991 11:33 | 4 |
| My roommate in the hospital had terrible itching her entire pregnancy,
she said it felt like the itch was from the inside to the outside. The
Dr determined that it was caused by the alkaline level. Good luck!
|