Aquagenic urticaria: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
interwiki |
||
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
[[de:Wassernesselsucht]] |
[[de:Wassernesselsucht]] |
||
[[es:Urticaria acuagénica]] |
|||
⚫ | |||
[[fr:Urticaire aquagénique]] |
[[fr:Urticaire aquagénique]] |
||
[[ja:水アレルギー]] |
[[ja:水アレルギー]] |
||
[[no:Aquagenic Urticaria]] |
[[no:Aquagenic Urticaria]] |
||
[[pt:Urticária aquagênica]] |
[[pt:Urticária aquagênica]] |
||
⚫ |
Revision as of 10:00, 3 January 2012
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2010) |
Aquagenic urticaria | |
---|---|
Specialty | Dermatology |
Aquagenic urticaria, also known as water urticaria and aquagenous urticaria, is a rarely diagnosed form of physical urticaria. It is sometimes described as an allergy, although it is not a true histamine releasing allergic reaction like other forms of urticaria. The defining symptom is a painful skin reaction resulting from contact with water. This may also be the effect of different temperatures of water, such as cold or hot and can flare with chemicals such as chlorine
Symptoms
Aquagenic urticaria usually causes the skin to itch and burn after being exposed to water of any kind. The skin may develop hives. Showers may result in severely dry eyes and soreness. Higher water temperatures tend to expedite the formation of hives. Shortness of breath or swelling in the throat can occur when drinking water. The pain usually persists for between 10–120 minutes.[1]
Causes
Contact with any form of water can cause symptoms to appear. One's own or someone else’s sweat can cause a reaction, so most affected people try to stay cool in summer to avoid sweating as much as possible. Tears on one's face from crying can also cause pain. Most people with aquagenic urticaria try to stay out of the rain and carry umbrellas as a precautionary measure. Cleansing the body often induces such an intense reaction that affected people may take very short showers to lessen the severity of the pain.[2]
Treatment
There is no known treatment for aquagenic urticaria. Dermatologists recommend avoiding contact with water as much as possible by taking short showers, staying cool, and avoiding rain to ease symptoms. Antihistamines, Zostrix, and other types of medications may be prescribed to help reduce the intensity of the reaction.[3]
See also
References
External links
- About.com Dermatology Article
- Dailymail Teenage girl who is allergic to water - The Daily Mail News
- Dailymail