Music City Mama
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 31, 2009
- Messages
- 2,943
I know hives can be mysterious and unexplained sometimes, but I just wanted to hear if anyone has any similar stories that can give me any insight as to what might be going on.
I do need to preface this with the fact that my 9 year old is allergic to peanuts (and we also avoid tree nuts). He reacted to peanut butter when we first introduced it when he was 2 years old -- he had facial hives and swelling (but not in his mouth/throat). His allergy was confirmed and retesting a couple of times since then still shows that he's reactive (we do carry an EpiPen, btw). He's never had a food reaction since then (however, we are diligent about reading labels -- won't allow "may contain", "processed in the same facility", etc.).
He's always had sensitive skin -- mild eczema when he was younger, particularly in the creases of his elbows and behind his knees. He's sensitive to grass -- if he's running around outside in the summer, he'll sometimes get a couple of contact hives on certain parts of his skin that go away once we wash it off. He takes Allegra on high pollen days only. There's a low pollen count here right now, but the one thing that is in the air is ragweed which I do think is a trigger for him.
Early on Friday evening, he told me his legs were really itchy. I told him that dry weather can do that and I looked at his legs and they were covered in hives. I pulled up his shirt and his torso was also covered in hives. I immediately gave him Benadryl, looked inside his mouth for swelling, asked him how he was feeling (fine other than itchy), and then asked him about what he may have eaten that day and when this started. He said it started after school but before dinner. He said he absolutely did not eat anything questionable or new that day.
The next day (yesterday), a good 18 or so hours later, he got hives again -- this time on his face in addition to his body. Again, not feeling weird/bad other than the itchy. Gave Benadryl and all was well for a few hours. He went to friend's house for a couple of hours last night (I stayed, just in case) and he broke out again (about 7 hours after the previous outbreak).
He's not sick at all (although, he does sound stuffy this morning), we haven't changed laundry detergents (we're at end of the same jug, so it's not like it's a new jug of our same stuff), and we just can't piece it together. At this point, I feel like it's not food-related, but of course I can't be sure.
Has anyone or their child experienced anything like this and was a cause ever determined? I remember having a bout of hives for about 2 weeks in my mid twenties, but I never figured out what was causing it.
I do need to preface this with the fact that my 9 year old is allergic to peanuts (and we also avoid tree nuts). He reacted to peanut butter when we first introduced it when he was 2 years old -- he had facial hives and swelling (but not in his mouth/throat). His allergy was confirmed and retesting a couple of times since then still shows that he's reactive (we do carry an EpiPen, btw). He's never had a food reaction since then (however, we are diligent about reading labels -- won't allow "may contain", "processed in the same facility", etc.).
He's always had sensitive skin -- mild eczema when he was younger, particularly in the creases of his elbows and behind his knees. He's sensitive to grass -- if he's running around outside in the summer, he'll sometimes get a couple of contact hives on certain parts of his skin that go away once we wash it off. He takes Allegra on high pollen days only. There's a low pollen count here right now, but the one thing that is in the air is ragweed which I do think is a trigger for him.
Early on Friday evening, he told me his legs were really itchy. I told him that dry weather can do that and I looked at his legs and they were covered in hives. I pulled up his shirt and his torso was also covered in hives. I immediately gave him Benadryl, looked inside his mouth for swelling, asked him how he was feeling (fine other than itchy), and then asked him about what he may have eaten that day and when this started. He said it started after school but before dinner. He said he absolutely did not eat anything questionable or new that day.
The next day (yesterday), a good 18 or so hours later, he got hives again -- this time on his face in addition to his body. Again, not feeling weird/bad other than the itchy. Gave Benadryl and all was well for a few hours. He went to friend's house for a couple of hours last night (I stayed, just in case) and he broke out again (about 7 hours after the previous outbreak).
He's not sick at all (although, he does sound stuffy this morning), we haven't changed laundry detergents (we're at end of the same jug, so it's not like it's a new jug of our same stuff), and we just can't piece it together. At this point, I feel like it's not food-related, but of course I can't be sure.
Has anyone or their child experienced anything like this and was a cause ever determined? I remember having a bout of hives for about 2 weeks in my mid twenties, but I never figured out what was causing it.