Guest guest Posted December 3, 2002 Report Share Posted December 3, 2002 #40 does me in. Doesn't take much, and liquid form is much worse than any sort of solid form. (I can eat about 3 Twizzlers before I start getting sick to my stomach and then developing hives...I can't take in any sort of red drink without getting sick and hivey.) My wedding punch was a mixture of fresh berries that we put in the blender and pureed, then froze...took it to the reception that way...got there and put it in the bowl and added 7Up to it. Yummy. It would also work for frozen berries. No food dyes at all, since the berries are naturally colored...it came out a kind of purple color. Funny thing is, we remembered that, but my hubby forgot the marriage license! He had to send his sister back to his house to get it so we could get it signed and be *officially* married. We figured out the red dye thing through hot dogs. I could eat the regular flesh-colored ones, but got sick and had hives every time I'd eat the red ones that everyone was so fond of at picnics and sporting events and stuff. Once we realized what was causing it, we started really looking at the other stuff I was eating, and realized that I did it with anything red. (Other dyes than 40 also make me ill.) I'm just glad that Triana shows no signs of being allergic to it...there are some things you miss out on because of it, and this way she won't have to. I understand the asthma issue, too...I have asthma. It was extremely bad as a kid, and I had to sleep nearly sitting up for a lot of my childhood. I tend to do more wheezing and coughing than anything, actually, and didn't realize that was part of the asthma until recently. (I had lived with it for so long that I hadn't really read up on anything about it...so I just assumed it was only those " attacks " that were part of it...sheesh, I can be dense sometimes.) So now I actually use my inhaler when I'm wheezing too, so I don't wind up having an attack later. They've got me on Advair for daily use at the moment. I've noticed it being a little bit better since I've started taking it. (I can actually exercise to some extent now without having an attack.) Anyhow, I have to run...time for morning CPT with Triana...yippee...at least she's doing somewhat better in this department, although she still hates it and fights through at least part of each session. Shanna mom of Triana, age 2 wcf Re: Zithromax upset Shanna, My daughter was allergic to Red Dye #40 but she isn't any more. And reading your post is like someone just shined a light into my eyes! MAYBE, my daughter was never allergic to penicillin in the first place! Liquid Amoxicillian -- to which she did develop hives -- is colored pink! IF Amoxicillian is colored pink by Red dye #40, perhaps that's why she got hives in the first place. I figured out the dye allergy in a weird way. Ever since she was about 2 years old, she developed excema on the backs of her calves, behind her knees, and inside the crook of her arms. Sometimes the backs of her legs were so bad it looked like they'd been burned with a blow torch. Nothing her allergist tried did any good. When she was about 3, I think, I took her to the pediatrician because I suspected she had asthma. He put her on alupent syrup -- the same med he'd put on a couple years earlier right before his CF diagnosis. Well, her wheezing cleared up but her legs got worse. (She wheezes like a frieght train during an asthma flare up, but when 's asthma flares, he just sounds sort of out of breath). Anyway, her legs got really bad so I took her back to their allergy specialist, who took a scraping, said she was culturing staph, and put her on an antibiotic and prescribed Aveeno baths, a prescription hydrocortisone lotion, and Vaseline Intensive Care Lotion's special dermatology formula for severely dry skin. I finally got her legs back under control and several days later my youngest sister came to visit and brought the kids a packet of red Kool-Aid as a treat (back then, I never bought Kool-Aid). The next day, 's legs flared up again. I got them cleared up, then she needed Alupent again, and again the excema returned. Finally (okay, so I'm slow!), I wondered if it was red food coloring. I went to the grocery store and found the packet of Kool-Aid and read the ingredients, then I went to our pharmacy and asked them to look up the ingredients in alupent. Bingo. Both had red dye #40. was such a trooper about dropping red from her diet. She felt so special! Whenever there was a party at school, I'd send a Kool-Aid drink box with her as a treat instead of drinking whatever red party punch some well-meaning homeroom mother would bring. In those days, the Kool-Aid drink boxes did *not* have red dye #40, though their packets of mix did. Sadly, that changed and they started putting red dye in the drink boxes. But she was so good about it. Whenever she'd get M&Ms, she'd trade me all her red ones and choose different colors from my bag. But like I said, she can eat red now. Funny story... Just a couple years ago told me that when she was a little girl, whenever I'd look at the crooks of her arms saying, " You have excema in your arms, " she always thought I was saying, " You have eggs in your arms. " And that's what she'd tell her friends if they ever asked about the rash, " I just have eggs in my arms! " Anyway, I have heard about people becoming unallergic to all sorts of things, so it's possible about meds too. I know that some people with CF have gone into the hospital to become desensitized to an antibiotic to which they are allergic. One person told me it involved close monitoring in ICU to be sure there wasn't a life-threatening reaction, and they do IV benedryl at the same time. Kim Mom to (23 with cf and asthma) and (20 asthma no cf) > > Thank you everyone who has responded. My doctor went to the big CF > > conference in New Orleans. There they talked about zithromax being > > used and how the studies showed increased lung function. The study > > was small, but promising. So she is starting her patients on Zithro > > for 6 months as a study. I don't think there is a placebo involved. > > We are getting our meds from the pharmacy and paying for them > > ourselves. I'm just upset as he is not responding well to the > > zithromax due to the tummy aches and big red spots on him. He has > > taken this med for infections in the past. I will call today and see > > if he can go to 250 on Mon. Wed. and Fri. or if he has to stop it > > completely. > > > > Darci > > 8 y/o wcf 2 sibs nocf > > > > > > ------------------------------------------- > > The opinions and information exchanged on this list should IN NO WAY > > be construed as medical advice. > > > > PLEASE CONSULT YOUR PHYSICIAN BEFORE CHANGING ANY MEDICATIONS OR > TREATMENTS. > > > > ------------------------------------ > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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