Quick update. I haven't run for 2 weeks
now so i have not really sweat much. I've
just finished four out of six weekly
treatments of accupuncture and I must say
there is a great improvement. I've also
been using some chinese medicine as well.
I was just doing some eBay stuff and
moving some boxes around and the itching
still acts up but not as bad. I was
playing ball at the beach yesterday and no
itching at all. I would recommend anyone
with CU to give accupuncture a try, it
doesnt hurt but there is the occasional
pinch sometimes but once its in you wont
even know you got 2 dozen needles sticking
outta you. Look into your insurance and
see if accupuncture is covered, otherwise
you may have to shell out about 300-400
bucks. Once my full treatment is done ill
update if it work 100% and if it will last
after the treatment is done.
|
bheeku123
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 09 Aug 2007 Posts: 1
Cholinergic Urticaria And Allergic Rhinitis Posted: 08-09-07 12:58pm
I read most of the posts in this forum and
my condition matches that of cholinergic
urticaria... really got the information i
wanted... i was/am suffering from this
itchy bumps due whenever exposed to hot
climate or after exercise... it started
roughtly 3 weeks ago when it was damn
cold... a couple of years back, during
winter again, i had allergic rhinitis and
had to take a dose of antihistamines,
doses of cetirizine etc.,... it did not
solve the problem... but, after some hit
and trail... i could manage ... now, i
know what triggers rhinities and try to
take precaution... but, hives is new...
never had any skin problems or anything as
such.... but, my skin is dry... this
winter was bad and my water intake reduced
.... the first time i started feeling
itchy feeling was after taking hot ( i
mean very hot) bath and walking or
climbing....
does anybody have hives because of
rhinitis?
i think after reading a lots of posts... i
might first try the sweat method... i have
become lethargic due to my profession and
that may have resulted in my
condition..... i have not visited any
doctor yet... was trying to apply lot of
over the counter moisturizers as i
initially thought it was eczema or some
dermatitis or allergic reaction to some
food... but, i realize it is only jogging
or running which makes it appear..... it
triggers hives and after 15 mins or so, i
am back to normal as if nothing
happened...it is making life worse, as i
cannot do any activity which increases
body temperature....
I feel sorry for all the people suffering
with this problem for years...
|
b83
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 26 Aug 2007 Posts: 1
First Post -- I Have Cu Posted: 08-26-07 01:15am
I'm a 24yo male, and I've had CU since the
beginning of this year - Jan. 2007. My
primary doctor had no idea what I was
experiencing, when I started seeing him
about it in February. He suspected hives,
and so I started doing my own research. I
came to the conclusion, that without a
doubt, I had CU. I told my primary
doctor, and he didn't even know what it
was. I saw him a total of 3 times before
he referred me to an allergist (also
called immunologist), and he still would
not agree that I had CU, mostly because he
didn't understand it.
When I first saw my allergist (May 2007),
I hadn't even finished describing my
symptoms, and he stopped me to say - "you
know, you have cholinergic urticarea!" I
was relieved, hopeful that there was a
cure, but as of yet, i haven't found one.
Just like most people with CU, I get it
the most when I'm hot or stressed.
There's not a day that goes by that I
don't have it, or have some sort of
breakout. Sometimes the smallest amount
of stress will cause it. It's the worst
on my wrists and hands, and my feet and
ankles. In extreme breakouts, it affects
my arms and back very intensely.
Sometimes there is no visible hives, but
often they appear as really small red or
pink dots. It's like waves of pins and
needles all over.
I tried the "sweat it out" method - ha!
that might work for some people, but not
at all for me. I thought that maybe I
wasn't sweating enough -- but though I
don't sweat much usually, I did sweat.
After 20 minutes of the worst torture of
my life, on a treadmill, the hives did
start going away, but they came back just
as usual by the end of the hour, and the
rest of my day was just as bad. I tried
that for a number of days, and it proved
worthless - in fact, just the opposite,
because I was needlessly torturing myself.
When I told my allergist, he prescribed
an epi-pen - that's because forcing large
amounts of histamine release in your body
could cause anaphalactic shock, and death
if you're not careful. And, as I said, it
was worthless pain anyway.
My allergist prescribed a number of
antihistamines over the last few months.
Claratin (loritadine), which did nothing,
even at stronger doses. Zyrtec actually
made the hives worse. I tried it three
separate times, for a few weeks at time,
and each time, the hives greatly worsened.
As soon as I stopped taking the Zyrtec,
it got better (well, back to "normal" at
least). My doctor also prescribed
Hydroxazine, first 25mg each day, then 50,
then 75 and finally 100mg per day.
Besides doing nothing at smaller doses,
the larger doses only made me extremely
drowsy. At 100mg, I barely made it out of
bed the next morning (the doctor had me
taking it just before bed), only to
practically faint in the shower, and go
back to bed for the rest of the day. I've
also tried various combinations of
Singulair and Clarinex along with the
previously mentioned drugs, with no
improvement. The only drug that I've
taken that shows a really minor amount of
improvement is Zantac (ranitadine). The
Zantac only helps stop the hives visibly
forming, even though they feel just as
intense. 95% of the pain feels like it's
under my skin - almost in my nerves. The
5% that is on the surface of my skin is
caused by the physical appearance of the
hives, but it's more like a slight sting
that lingers after the hives have already
started dissapearing. So, needless to
say, the Zantac takes care of that 5%.
My hive breakouts usually last 2 - 10
minutes, but average at about 5 minutes
from beginning to end, if I'm able to get
into a cool place, and de-stress. The
visible hives are completely gone after 10
minutes or less.
Oh yeah, I tried benadryl and a few other
over the counter anti-histamines
(basically every over the counter
anti-histamine I could find), and none of
those have worked at any dosage.
So my doctor says that I'm out of options,
as far as drugs are concerned. There are
stronger drugs that might work, but the
extreme side-effects and long-term affects
apparently aren't worth the risk.
I'm still taking the Zantac (Ranitadine,
the generic equivalant) 300mg per day, and
that helps just slightly. I will
definitely try to post any updates if I
find anything that helps more than that.
CU is just so hard to explain to friends
and family! Just talking about it makes
be stress and break out, so I'd rather not
tell people when I can avoid it.
I'm not so much looking for suggestions on
this forum (though they are very
appreciated), as much as I'm just trying
to share my own experience with CU for
others who are just as lost trying to find
a cure. So, I'll keep you updated...
|
Icelement
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 29 Aug 2007 Posts: 2 Location: California
First Post - 2+ Years of Cu Sofar. Posted: 08-29-07 13:49pm
Boy, I hear you b83.
I'm 17 right now, and starting my first
year at college. I started having
outbreaks in June of '05, and they've only
gotten worse over the past 2 years.
I've been to over 10 doctors, some in
different specialties than others, and
nothing has worked. I've tried basically
every medication that my insurance covers,
and a few others, including over the
counter meds as well. I just can't seem to
get any relief, similar to you. I'm
currently still trying running every day
or every other day, depending on my energy
level. I really don't see it helping much,
because it has just about the same effect
on me as it did on you, b83. Sweat causing
more itching, then a slight reprieve from
the itch, then an hour later everything is
back to "normal." It really is a
nightmare.
I've read most of this thread and I've
seen many people acknowledging acupuncture
as a solid treatment for CU. I'm really
considering trying it as soon as possible.
My problem is the money, not the belief or
anything. I'd love to see if it would work
on me, or many other people in this same
position.
On a little side note, I've been using
"Icelement" as my
internet name for about 5-6 years, and 2
years ago I developed an allergy to heat.
Coincidence? I think not!
I hope everyone out there is feeling at
least a little better after new treatments
or medicine! If you have any new ideas or
'super-cures' be sure to post them! I'm up
for anything at this point.
-Icelement
|
Abby_lg
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 06 Sep 2007 Posts: 2 Location: ,
Posted: 09-06-07 14:20pm
oh thank god. i thought i was a medical
mystery! im 17 years old, and a senior in
high school. my cu started in 6th grade,
and ever since they come when i excersice,
get hot, get upset, and sometimes just
completely random. its been really hard
because i really felt like i was alone. no
one new what it was and no one at school
understood. its embarassing for a 11 year
old to be taken out of school in a
wheelchair, covered in hives, but i got
used to it eventually and learned what my
triggers were. every now and then i push
myself too far and get a really bad one,
but i pretty much keep them under control.
its been hard lately, however. in my
school district its mandatory to take gym
to graduate for one semester. well, i put
it off till senior year, and now ive just
started the year and already its
incredibly stressful. my gym teacher says
i have to participate to pass, and my
parents and doctors are talking about
taking it to the board. sometimes i hate
the fact that i got stuck with this just
by chance and now have to put up with the
humiliation and shame. high school kids
are brutal, i tell you what, and ive
gotten to know the nurses quite well.
anyways, i just wanted to rant to someone
who actually knew what i felt for once.
|
Icelement
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 29 Aug 2007 Posts: 2 Location: California
Posted: 09-06-07 14:52pm
Abby_lg
wrote:
oh thank god. i thought i
was a medical mystery! im 17 years old,
and a senior in high school. my cu started
in 6th grade, and ever since they come
when i excersice, get hot, get upset, and
sometimes just completely random. its been
really hard because i really felt like i
was alone. no one new what it was and no
one at school understood. its embarassing
for a 11 year old to be taken out of
school in a wheelchair, covered in hives,
but i got used to it eventually and
learned what my triggers were. every now
and then i push myself too far and get a
really bad one, but i pretty much keep
them under control.
its been hard lately, however. in my
school district its mandatory to take gym
to graduate for one semester. well, i put
it off till senior year, and now ive just
started the year and already its
incredibly stressful. my gym teacher says
i have to participate to pass, and my
parents and doctors are talking about
taking it to the board. sometimes i hate
the fact that i got stuck with this just
by chance and now have to put up with the
humiliation and shame. high school kids
are brutal, i tell you what, and ive
gotten to know the nurses quite well.
anyways, i just wanted to rant to someone
who actually knew what i felt for
once.
You sound almost exactly like me. Same
triggers, probably very similar exercise
limits, and I got to know the nurses at my
school as well
Getting it off your chest is a good idea.
It really is such a hard thing to live
with, so not talking about it can build up
and get you stressed, causing more
outbreaks. I went through that a few
months ago, along with some slight
depression. Summer is tough.
Now that its starting to cool off for fall
I'm feeling much happier, and have a
better attitude. If I may ask, where do
you live? I've been in Cali my whole life,
and I'm just wondering. My school nurse
was VERY awesome about my classes and
reworking my schedule so that I can go to
school without CU being a problem. It
sounds like you're having a lot of trouble
with it.
I hope you have an easier time in the
coming months. Good luck with the P.E.
situation.
Oh and I forgot to ask if you could
describe your current meds, or best
working combinations of meds you've taken
that helped the most. I've been wanting to
talk to my doctor about other possible
meds for me to take. Thanks!
-Icelement
p.s. I still haven't done the acupuncture,
but I'm looking for a place nearby to try
it.
|
Abby_lg
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 06 Sep 2007 Posts: 2 Location: ,
Posted: 09-06-07 15:02pm
i live in maryland, complete opposite side
of the country i really hope it
gets resolved, i dont want it to affect my
other classes or other aspects of my life.
right now im not taking any meds, because
nothing has been working. ive tried every
antihistamine there is on the market, and
the only things that seem to work are
epipens, and benadryl when i actually have
an outbreak. so far, i have found nothing
to prevent it, only to ged rid of it when
it happens. sorry i cant help you :\
it really is hard to live with. my family
is very supportive, but they just dont
understand what its like.
|
nds88
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 22 Apr 2007 Posts: 20
Posted: 09-06-07 21:46pm
Dang, sounds like you two got cu pretty
bad. The best method for me is the
sweating method. Although Ice your in Cali
so you must be sweating all the time
(unless you avoid it by staying in) and it
doesnt seem to be working for you...so i
dunno wat to suggest. I'm in Vancouver,
Canada....rain and cold 4/5 outta the
year. I wish I were in Cali for my
cu....wanna trade places?? I'm trying
accupuncture and a natural herbal pill. It
does work but its not gone yet- 8
treatments over 8 weeks so far. It
improved quite a bit, its levelled off for
a while, but it does still affect my life,
I cant do all the things I would like or
be who I wanna be at certain times because
of it. Combination sweating in the morning
before the day starts and accupuncture
once a week seems to be good improvement.
The best advice is just to physically burn
all those frickin histamines off by
purposly heating up. Makes sense and seems
to work, for me though, since there's only
so much histamine in your body so if you
purposely deplete it it you should be fine
until your body produces it again, usually
about 12-24 hours until enough is made to
become bothersome. First time will be
extreme torture cuz if you've avoided
breakouts a huge reservoir of histamine is
in you. If you burn off more in a day than
your body produces it gets easier and
easier everyday. Good luck!
|
Duper
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 18 Jun 2006 Posts: 33 Location: New york
Posted: 09-07-07 13:19pm
Hey guys, just checking in. I'm in NY and
the weather has been pretty good lately
(80s), so it's been easier to sweat. My
question for you guys is do you guys have
any of your teeth filled in? I think I
developed CU about a month after I had my
teeth filled in and I only recently began
to think that the two might be connected.
Thanks
|
nds88
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 22 Apr 2007 Posts: 20
Posted: 09-09-07 15:09pm
Duper
wrote:
Hey guys, just checking in.
I'm in NY and the weather has been pretty
good lately (80s), so it's been easier to
sweat. My question for you guys is do you
guys have any of your teeth filled in? I
think I developed CU about a month after I
had my teeth filled in and I only recently
began to think that the two might be
connected.
Thanks
Nope, never had any of my teeth filled
recently. I chipped my tooth 9 yrs ago
when i was 10, and had it re-built....and
i didnt develop cu when i was 10. I think
CU is just something to do with hormones
or something with puberty, CU mostly
affects guys around 17-21, just when
were're done/slowing down on the growing
and the hormones and junk start changing
again. I don't know anyone here in their
mid 20s who just start to develop cu or
still have cu from when they were in their
late teens. There may be a very few, but
that is to the very extreme. One of my
friends had the same condition as me when
he was in his late teens, only lasted a
few months for him. Hes 28 now.
|
Justin96
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 11 Sep 2007 Posts: 1
I Can Rid My Cu Temporarily. Posted: 09-11-07 12:46pm
Just like the runner I am a bodybuilder
and suffer from CU. When I have not
broken a full sweat in a few days I'm
usually in for a horrible experience once
I go back again. I have only recently
found out what I suffer from. I have had
this problem since I was 14 and I'm 30
now. I used to dread mowing the lawn for
my parents in the summertime the grass
dust and sun only aggravated the
condition. Here is what I suggest for
those of you out there that are afraid to
go outside or to the mall because they are
worried they may have a breakout. Drink
tons of water. Diluting the sweat and
removing the salt from the body lessens
the severity and duration of the breakout.
I usually bring a gallon of water to the
gym during my workout. If you are more
hydrated the better chance you have of
breaking a good clean sweat. If you are
urinating dark yellow your sweat is likely
acidic and salty. This kind of sweat is
extremely irritating to my skin and the
itching can cause my throat to close up
and make it hard to breathe. I don't rely
on antihistamines, or any other remedies
although I have found that Paxil lessened
my symptoms while I was taking that.
If you sweat thoroughly and often you can
completely eliminate any future breakouts.
The hard part it deliberately putting
yourself through an initial breakout.
Once you sweat daily your histamine levels
are depleted and only mild yet bearable
breakouts occur.
|
CharliePoulos
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 11 Sep 2007 Posts: 2
Cu Posted: 09-11-07 13:02pm
Hello all,
I am a doctor in the the Miami area and
have had a tremendous amount of patients
come in with these symptoms. Up until
about 2000 there was not much study done
on Cholinergic Urticaria, however we now
have lot of information on this disorder.
First let me say that you should never
feel like it will never go away, because
most people do get better. In fact, 70% of
all people who suffer from Cholinergic
Urticaria say that there symptoms are gone
within 6 months to 1 year. There are
however, cases in which a person can have
the symptoms for long periods of time.
These are rare cases. Most people who
suffer from lifetime Cholinergic Urticaria
are people who experience it early in
childhood ( usually around age 8-10 ) and
these people may have symptoms of some
sort through their life. However the
majority of people who have Cholinergic
Urticaria, basically get it from out of
the clear blue. Another words, one day you
feel fine and then you wake up for that
hot shower and bam! Your broke out all
over. Your body is a sort of like a
machine and whatever it has grown use to,
it will expect on a day in day out basis.
If for some reason, there is an increased
amount of stress it may bring on the first
symptoms of Cholinergic Urticaria. Most
cases of this disorder are originally
triggered by an extreme amount of stress.
Not normal daily stressful activity, but
something that sets your body off in a
serious way ( divorce, loss of job, severe
money problems, death in family ) and
things of that nature.
As far as treatment, I would highly advise
that you try to avoid the outbreaks. Take
cool or luke warm showers, no long
workouts, and most importantly try to keep
your stress level to a minimum as this can
actually help eliminate the problem. Try
and find a hobby that takes your mind off
of the fact that you have this disorder.
It has been proven that people who have
hobbies have lower blood pressure than
those who dont. So try and find something
you really enjoy doing and have fun with
it. This will help in the healing process.
There are plenty of medications that can
be used to treat Cholinergic Urticaria and
you should speak to your doctor about what
options are available to you.
I recently attended a seminar in Athens,
Greece about Cholinergic Urticaria and
some studies in Greece have determined
that people who live in a hotter climate
are 3x more likely to have the problem at
some point in their life. One thing that
is very important to remember. This will
go away. For those on here saying that its
getting worse and worse and worse and
worse and worse. I have to say its all in
their mind. It is a well known fact that
your body gets use to anything! Another
words, if you were to lose your eye site.
It would be horrible at first, but as time
went on your brain would grow use to the
fact that you can no longer see. It would
then not bother you. When you get in an
ice cold swimming pool, your body tells
you its time to get out. After ignoring
what your body tells you, your body says
well if your not getting out then i'll
re-adjust my setting. After 20 minutes you
no longer feel cold. Why is that? The
water is the same temp. but your not
cold!!! Its because your body adjust! As
does your body adjust to Cholinergic
Urticaria. Im not saying that it wont be
there, im just saying you will become more
use to it and it wont bother you as much
as time goes on. For most, it will just go
away.
I hope this has helped. Thanks and God
bless you all.
Mr. Poulos
|
CharliePoulos
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 11 Sep 2007 Posts: 2
Simple Relief For Cu Posted: 09-13-07 20:34pm
I also wanted to add a few extra pieces of
information that should be of some help.
I have had several of my patients say the
following have helped them fight off CU
attacks.
First of all, drink lots of orange juice (
contains Vit. C ) or if you aren't a big
O.J. fan then simply take some vitamin C
pills
Second, I have had several patients say
that Red Bull energy drinks help them go
attack free. Some even say that it cured
the CU? I am not sure of the stability of
this but I do know that Redbull has lots
of root extracts and important vitamins (
Vitamin B and B 12 ) also Taurine which
has been called the unestablished cure for
many things. So what the heck, give a
RedBull a try and see the results.
Third, don't let it ruin your life.
Giving up your life only causes more
severe stress and will also add
depression. Fight through the attacks and
maintain your life.
I really wish you all the best and I know
that everything will work out.
Prayers to you all
|
JJB
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 15 Sep 2007 Posts: 4
Cu Posted: 09-15-07 20:50pm
hi all,
this is my first post. i've had cu for
about 4-5 months, diagnosed about a month
ago by a dermatologist... got the typical
recommendation, hot showers,
anti-histamine and sun exposure.
unfortunately i feel these only treat the
symptoms, not the underlying cause. my
flare-ups happen mostly in the afternoon
now, used to be morning. Mine is caused
when I get too hot, and or stressed
(summer is approaching, kind of concerned
that I'm going to be up the creek, trying
to find something to fix this before
then).
I work at home and whenever work would
call (or anyone for that matter) it get
it. i've started juicing veges and doing
a parasite cleanse and liver detox (want
to a complete detox at some stage), it
appears to have gotten a little better
since starting this, it's hard to tell
tho. I haven't tried the sweating yet, I
do notice that I don't sweat as much as I
used to however. Running won't work for
however as I also have chronic fatigue,
and i feel that both of these are somehow
related - immune/adrenal, thyroid
dysfunctions. I only developed cu after a
bit over a year into my cfs, after a
particularly stressfull time.
Anyway, I've tried a lot of different
approaches, chinese herbs (going to give
this a shot for the cu), and naturopathy
(will try again also most likely). I was
told by one guy I had candida, and I know
I've got a dodgy liver as I can feel it
most of the time. hopefully a good detox
can help.
I guess u've gotta try and attack this
from all angles, try everything u possibly
can to see what works, there doesn't
appear to be any one cure all... which sux
i must say.
Might also try and get a portable sauna,
see if sweating it out helps, not sure if
i could stand the itching tho, i've
started having cold showers when i have an
attack.
anyway, fingers crossed something works.
will update as i progress.
oh, and thanks to all the previous posters
with their suggestions, I'll try each one
as i get a chance, hoping something will
work
cheers
john
|
JJB
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 15 Sep 2007 Posts: 4
Cu Posted: 09-15-07 21:24pm
oh, one thing i'm doing i forgot to
mention, if stress/anxiety also trigger a
reaction. try downloading some holosync
from a torrent (do the prologue first).
holosync is meant to bring your brain to a
meditative state, i know when i use it
does help me to relax. anyway, it's worth
a try.
|
JJB
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 15 Sep 2007 Posts: 4
Hivectin Posted: 09-17-07 00:43am
anyone heard of or used this with any
success?
|
silentchange
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 19 Sep 2007 Posts: 3
Cu Posted: 09-19-07 21:40pm
hi my name is chris im 20. i have had
cholinergic urticaria for 2 years now. i
seem to have a much worse form then most
people. i also have raynuads and VERY dry
skin thats tight and constricted
preventing me from sweating normally on my
own. does anyone else have this dry of
skin? i cant shower or exercise. i can
rarely go outside. im in severe pain most
of the time. ive tried most of the
antihistamines, herbs, accupuncture which
did nothing. Prednisone helped a great
deal but the doctors only let me take it
for 6 weeks and i developed some side
affects from it. the only thing i have
found that helps is covering myself in
amonium lactate lotion 12%. twice or more
a day. and the sweating method but only by
going to a steam room. this is very
difficult to do for the first 20 mins. but
eventually sweat comes out and i feel a
better until i leave then it returns about
2 to 3 hours later but after i get out i
cover myself in the amonium lactate. i
cant work and am fighting for disability.
i belive this all started because i took a
drug called accutane. an acne drug. 6
weeks into the course i developed all of
these symptoms. has anyone else
experienced this? and i did also get a
tooth filled at that time. ive spent
thousands of dollars on this illness and
have given up on expieramenting. weed can
help to calm the nerves somtimes but isnt
that effective. i hear the average
duration of this is 7.5 years. i hope it
isnt that long for me. i want my life
back.
|
JJB
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 15 Sep 2007 Posts: 4
Accutane Posted: 09-19-07 21:44pm
I took a drug called roaccutane about ten
years ago... possible that there's some
damage it did I'm only experiencing now...
i have no idea tho.
|
nds88
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 22 Apr 2007 Posts: 20
Posted: 09-21-07 15:37pm
I took accutane as well. I've been off of
it for 3 years, can't remember exactly. It
is possible that it did some liver damage
which some say CU is connected to the
liver. I never had CU symtoms during
accutane. Anyone else take accutane? Lets
all try to narrow in on the cause of this.
Update on my condition. 12 accupuncture
sessions completed. CU has improved but
its still here. It is alot better compared
to its peak in Februarary. I bike for
about 20 mins 4-5 days a week just to
purposely break out. Break outs are less
frequent and when i do break out alot less
intense but still very bothersome.
Overall, taking in consideration both
intensity and frequency I would say 60-75%
better depending on the day. O ya,
remember to post if you have taken
accutane or not.
|
frizzers
New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 08 Aug 2006 Posts: 3
Roaccutane Posted: 09-23-07 15:51pm
Hello All,
I posted on here a while back. I have
textbook CU. I am 38 and have had it since
I was 20. 18 years of it.
It was triggered during a stressful period
and it has got worse as I have got older.
When I was younger and fitter I was able
to manage it by exercising and kind of
burning it off for twenty-four hours. Not
now.
I am lucky that antihistamines work as an
effective preventative, though not a cure.
Clarityn, Zirtek, Xyzal all work - though
I think they cause weight gain.
Anyway, I was given a lot of drugs as a
teenager for my acne. These were
TETRACYCLINE
OXY-TETREACYCLINE
ERYTHROMYACIN
and
RO-ACCUTANE
Ro-accutane is famous for its
side-effects. It is a very strong drug. I
had always blamed my CU on Tetracycline
Please post if at any time you have been
given these drugs.
One poster before mentioned
Erythromyacin.
My theory is that these drugs were the
cause and the stress was the trigger.
I remember getting the most aching body
and muscles during the roaccutane
treatment - and I 'm sure I suffer now
more than average with aching body parts.
Thinking back, I might have already had CU
before taking Ro-accutane, but the
condition definitely worsened after.