Guest guest Posted February 23, 2002 Report Share Posted February 23, 2002 Dorothy, I meant to answer your post earlier. I hope you'll forgive me. Has anyone suggested that your flushing, bumps, and eye irritation may be the result of a food allergy? After being diagnosed with rosacea and perioral dermatitis, I discovered that I had a food/topical allergy to something I was eating on a regular basis. I discovered this through trial and error and taking careful note of when I flushed and what I had eaten, etc. I also had a host of other body symptoms (GI disruptions, headache, heartburn, cancer sores in my mouth, cracks at the corners of my mouth) that cleared up when I elminated the problematic foods. I'm not suggesting you and I are allergic to the same things, but I am suggesting you might want to consider the possibility of an allergy. Taking an antihistime for a week or so (if it's medically appropriate) can be a good diagnostic tool. If your symptoms improve, you're probably looking at an allergy. I believe that derms aren't all that schooled in recognizing the range of allergy symptoms -- especially when they're chronic and sub-acute, rather than life-threatening. Your descriptions of intense flushing and the swollen patch that sometimes appears made me wonder. I get a similar patch under my lower lip and my eyes get miserably irritated. I've been hanging out here for about a year and I think that a really good percentage of the cases I see described might be allergy-based. But then, I'm not a doctor One final thing -- until you're sure, don't expose your face to a laser. Some people have reported good results, others miserable ones. I suspect that the allergic cases fare the worst. Your body can release histamine in reaction to heat and light, causing nasty reactions. Suzi __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2002 Report Share Posted February 24, 2002 So would it be wise for anyone with inhalant allergies and/or food allergies and rosacea to avoid photoderm treatment? > > One final thing -- until you're sure, don't expose > your face to a laser. Some people have reported good > results, others miserable ones. I suspect that the > allergic cases fare the worst. Your body can release > histamine in reaction to heat and light, causing nasty > reactions. > > > Suzi > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 24, 2002 Report Share Posted February 24, 2002 So would it be wise for anyone with inhalant allergies and/or food allergies and rosacea to avoid photoderm treatment? > > One final thing -- until you're sure, don't expose > your face to a laser. Some people have reported good > results, others miserable ones. I suspect that the > allergic cases fare the worst. Your body can release > histamine in reaction to heat and light, causing nasty > reactions. > > > Suzi > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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