Post #41,548
6/7/02 12:14:14 PM
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Poison sumac really really really really really sucks....
I just hope and pray you didna take a leak before you washed your hands...
OH the HORROR...
I took down a whole grove of Poison sumac quite a few years ago... I thought it was something else... What I dunno...
Well I guess that is TMI...
And yes, the affinity for Calamine Lotion is a side benefit of that occurance... any Silver Oxide lotion works well for calming the burning of it also...
Those friends I had then, that I still have now, still cackle about it from time to time...
greg, curley95@attbi.com -- REMEMBER ED CURRY!!!
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Post #41,560
6/7/02 1:18:33 PM
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Well, Oak seems to get an extra "really"
But that's all that would fit in the subject line, I'm sure. And no, I don't think I took a leak before I washed my hands, but I was wearing shorts while I was working. Luckily only two small spots on the legs, though.
It's my hands that are driving me crazy. In between the fingers and on the palm of my right hand. (Yes, of course I'm right handed.)
=== Microsoft offers them the one thing most business people will pay any price for - the ability to say "we had no choice - everyone's doing it that way." -- [link|http://z.iwethey.org/forums/render/content/show?contentid=38978|Andrew Grygus]
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Post #41,572
6/7/02 3:12:53 PM
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Cortisone may work better than calamine lotion.
At least when I had poison ivy last year it seemed to help more. My allergist gave me some sample tubes of some stuff to treat blisters on my arm, but even the over the counter 1% stuff may help. Calamine just turned my arm pink and left flakes everywhere as it dried and fell off, though [link|http://www.aad.org/pamphlets/PoisonIvy.html|this] dermatology page says OTC hydrocortisone doesn't help as it's not strong enough. YMMV.
I've heard from several people that eating poison ivy when you're young gives you immunity, but never tried it myself.
Itching is a nasty thing... Of all my childhood illnesses, I hated chicken pox the worst. :-(
Best of luck.
Cheers, Scott.
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Post #41,577
6/7/02 3:39:30 PM
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Poison ivy...
When I was young, maybe 8 or 10, I got poison ivy over most of my body. I was really a mess. I have been immune ever since. While I was in the medical racket, I mentioned this to an internal medicine resident, who told me that if the immunity ever broke down, the reaction would probably be strong enough to kill me... I haven't tried to test my immunity for a long time now...
Hugh
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Post #41,618
6/7/02 11:01:37 PM
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Hydrocortisone
Dirty bastard trick:
Go to the pet aisle in your grocery store. Hartz makes a 1% Hydrocortisone pump-spray for pets that costs much less than the OTC ointments. Works like a champ. Or, is that "works for a chimp"?
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Post #41,631
6/8/02 1:58:35 AM
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Just be aware that it is a steroid
Whatever is your attitude to overuse of such - and I have no info about the range of side effects if one is sensitive to such.
(Of course with terminal itching.. WTF some risks are worth taking)
IANAT (Toxicologist)
Ashton
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Post #41,644
6/8/02 12:00:00 PM
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Thanks, Ashton
Seriously. Thanks for this info. I always kind of assumed it was a non-steroidal, OTC, weak sister preparation commercially named to ride the coattails of Cortisone. Your post made me look deeper: [link|http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/sci/A0824711.html|Hydrocortisone at Infoplease]. I think you're very right that intense itching made me shut-off the risk-assessment parts of my brain.
I'm not one for medication--I think I average fewer than eight aspirin tablets per year. The only time I've ever used this stuff was on a rash on my neck that broke-out from spider mite bites. I only used it once-a-day (before going to sleep) for three days.
The human version of it was somewhere around $10 per ounce while the pet version was about $5 for a big 'ol pump spray bottle. I liked the pump spray because my reaction to the mite bites was such that even the application of the cream was irritating.
Thanks again.
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Post #41,659
6/8/02 5:15:03 PM
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Re: Just be aware that it is a steroid
Steroids are suspected to exacerbate eye problems such as I had. Be careful with them.
Regards,
-scott anderson
"Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson..."
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Post #41,674
6/8/02 7:37:26 PM
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Many years ago I used it for (at least several months)
for some minor skin thingies - which it sorta seemed to 'treat the symptoms of' = perfect allopathy. It was of course, hawked everywhere -- the panacea du jour. (We suffer then from, a er 'cortisone deficiency' normally?) When I heard a bit more from a biochemist, I stopped.
I have heard only vagueness re alleged length of time the effects remain in the body, thus far. These range from, "quite a while" through - forever. (kind like Herpes Simplex ??)
What I see is: when used around the knuckles (for ex.) the cream had the effect of erasing! the natural creases there, leaving that skin smooth. Permanently. Now whatever Else that 'might mean' - it has certainly given some New instructions to the skin maintenance machinery. What Other machinery got new Instructions ??
Ashton
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Post #41,690
6/8/02 11:33:52 PM
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Another helpful medication is diphenhydramine - Benadryl...
and the generic variations of it sold at drug stores. This is a alergic reaction, after all.
My wife got strong reaction to poison ivy, and took diphenhydramine, on a doctor's recommendation.
Alex
"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened." -- Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
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Post #41,623
6/8/02 12:15:41 AM
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Something like that happened to me once...
Only it wasn't poison ivy.
When I was about 11 or so, I took a leak into some bushes. Hit a honeybee. Said bee wasn't so happy about this, and managed to follow the stream to the source.
Owowowowow...
I never have forgotten to look first since.
Cheers, Ben
"... I couldn't see how anyone could be educated by this self-propagating system in which people pass exams, teach others to pass exams, but nobody knows anything." --Richard Feynman
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Post #41,691
6/8/02 11:45:31 PM
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Similar story.
Except I was outside, eating a peanut butter and jelly (fruit preserves for non US) sandwich. I didn't know it at the time, but a bee was helping with the jelly. When the bee found itself inside my mouth it stung the tongue (the other sex organ, if you will :) ).
Alex
"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened." -- Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
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Post #41,697
6/9/02 1:05:28 AM
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Two related stories
One mildly amusing, one sad.
At about the same age I had a peanut butter sandwich, and went outside without properly cleaning my face. A wasp landed and ate it off while I sat there petrified.
I took no harm, but it was not an experience that I intend to repeat.
The other story is the sad one A friend of my mother's in the 60's was drinking a cup of coffee in which (unbeknownst to him) a bee had drowned. The corpse stung his throat as he swallowed. He choked to death. :-(
Cheers, Ben
"... I couldn't see how anyone could be educated by this self-propagating system in which people pass exams, teach others to pass exams, but nobody knows anything." --Richard Feynman
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Post #41,776
6/9/02 9:36:04 PM
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Re: Two related stories
The sad story is that indeed. No question about getting a big fat tongue after the sting.
Alex
"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened." -- Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
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