my lungs are burning
Aug. 21st, 2002 08:24 pmOuch. Remember on Monday I said how I'd bought The Observer on Sunday? Well, it would appear that I am terribly allergic to it. Not in terms of politics or so on - but for some reason it's giving me really bad asthma. I think it's fumes from the ink. So I can't breathe properly, my lungs feel full of crud - and I can't read my newspaper!
Damnit! Damn allergies! It would seem that I am now allergic to: milk, caffeine, feathers, some animal fur, some kinds of pollen (don't know which), some perfumes, air fresheners, shoe polish & now ink. All of these things give me asthma, except for the milk and caffeine. Air fresheners and shoe polish are the worst (the only time I've ever been to hospital with asthma was thanks to a plug-in air freshener). At home, we use one very expensive non-aerosol spray in the bathroom, as it's the only air freshener I've found that doesn't make me wheeze. What else? Smoke (well, duh). I'm allergic to cigarette smoke, very allergic to cigar smoke, and only slightly allergic to pipe smoke. Very very allergic to marujuana smoke, but it's dense enough that I can see it in the air to avoid it, and it takes a long time to spread out. Besides, none of my close friends smoke anything these days.
And my peak flow meter is lying to me. It declares that I am huffing at 460 L/min, which is unlikely when my lungs are hurting and I feel dizzy from lack of oxygen, when the best I ever manage in a doctor's surgery is 440 L/min. Huh.
Damnit! Damn allergies! It would seem that I am now allergic to: milk, caffeine, feathers, some animal fur, some kinds of pollen (don't know which), some perfumes, air fresheners, shoe polish & now ink. All of these things give me asthma, except for the milk and caffeine. Air fresheners and shoe polish are the worst (the only time I've ever been to hospital with asthma was thanks to a plug-in air freshener). At home, we use one very expensive non-aerosol spray in the bathroom, as it's the only air freshener I've found that doesn't make me wheeze. What else? Smoke (well, duh). I'm allergic to cigarette smoke, very allergic to cigar smoke, and only slightly allergic to pipe smoke. Very very allergic to marujuana smoke, but it's dense enough that I can see it in the air to avoid it, and it takes a long time to spread out. Besides, none of my close friends smoke anything these days.
And my peak flow meter is lying to me. It declares that I am huffing at 460 L/min, which is unlikely when my lungs are hurting and I feel dizzy from lack of oxygen, when the best I ever manage in a doctor's surgery is 440 L/min. Huh.
no subject
Airfresheners murder me, too. Particularly those nasty plug-in ones. The only one that doesn't make me choke is Neutradol.
So far I react badly to: some printing inks and the industrial solvents they're dispersed in; aerosol antiperspirants and deodorants; penicillin and cephalosporin; a lot of perfumes/aftershaves; grapefruit oil; zinc oxide sticky-plaster; horse chestnut pollen; some unknown summertime pollen (though I don't know what); cigarette and cigar smoke (though hardly at all to pipe smoke, which probably explains why I can smoke *sigh* since I think that handrolling baccy, which is what I use, and pipe baccy don't have some gunk put into them) and very definitely marijuana smoke.
Fortunately I can avoid most of those most of the time, and, when I can't, there's always Ventolin and antihistamines.
no subject
Date: 2002-08-21 02:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-08-22 10:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-08-22 12:20 pm (UTC)For someone of my height, age and gender, my expected peak flow on asthma medication should be around 460 L/min, whereas the best it ever gets to is 440. This is, however, a conscious choice. I could take a higher dose of the "preventer" steroid medication, but that would give me more side-effects - I'd rather be on a lower dose and just avoid things like smoke which set it off.
There. Possibly more than you ever wanted to know about peak flow :)
no subject
Date: 2002-08-23 09:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2002-08-22 10:33 am (UTC)Ack. Sorry to hear that (although the Naurgiad on saturday is the better paper). Can you get on any immunotherapy courses or trials in your area? Is there any likelihood that your other medications are increasing your sensitivity to allergens?
(my hayfever actually improved slightly this year - lasted for only the three weeks from mid-June to early July, and was rendered manageable by antihistamines for the first time in years. Still dreading the possibility that it may progress to asthma at some point in the future.)
no subject
Date: 2002-08-22 12:34 pm (UTC)I suppose I should look into it, but I'm kept busy trying to sort out mental health stuff, which impacts my life a lot more, and I only have so many "arsedness points" allocated :) If I spent too much energy trying to chase up sorting out my allergies, I might miss out on something to do with mental health which would help my life a lot more. So far (*touch wood*) none of my allergies have given me anaphylaxic reactions, just annoying wheezing and rashes, which I can live with... with a lot of moaning, sure :) If any more serious reactions do come up, then getting properly allergy-tested will move from a low-level priority to much higher up - but hopefully that won't happen.