I’ve always had allergies. 
When I was a little kid they called them colds. As an adult, only time I
didn’t have them was during my wonderful 19 months living at a California
beach.  I moved; they came back. The
doctor was baffled. They seemed too bad to be allergies.
Then I moved to TX.  And for the first time, the whole nasal
thing got infected.  Antibiotics. They
cut the infection, not the endless sneeze/cough, runny nose.    
The second year, it was worse. So much coughing and sneezing I
couldn’t drive.  The doctor said he'd
send two scrips - each day I'd take fewer pills, and in a week I'd be done.  I got two tiny boxes.
When I unwrapped the fashionable “pacs” the first was a Prednisone
compound.  No. Uh-uh.  Back in the box. But I was miserable, so I
took them.  The antibiotic was amazing.   The steroids were not. The
coughing kept on until the tissue showed a few traces of blood with the cough.
 After several phone calls, I got the promised cough syrup.  Not
enough help. The doctor’s office called and asked if the meds worked. I told
them I was at the same place I would have been without the meds.
Mom used to say after disappointing
medicine 
 "Either this stuff is no good,
or I would have died without it." Hmm.
About a week after the steroids were all gone, the Surprises
began.
Suddenly I got red areas sort of like athletes foot ON my palms.
 (I have blepharitis- Try taking care of your eye infection with that on your
palms!  Put on clotrimazole.)
Same week, I had too many errand in the hot, hot car and no place
to park in the shade.  When I got home, the sweaty area at the edges of my
hair, and on my neck itched wildly. I got patches of streaky itchy hives and even
a couple of bumps. The next day, I still had big itchy red areas when I woke up.
I remembered a dermatologist’s words when I was very young:
..."I think you’re allergic to your
own sweat."
 I combed the web.  New
words:  
Cholinergic Urticaria
Updated:
Apr 04, 2017 Author: Robert A Schwartz, MD, MPH; 
“Cholinergic urticaria is one of
the physical urticarias brought
on by a physical stimulus. Although this stimulus might be considered to be
heat, the actual precipitating cause is sweating.” 
I changed my routine, stayed in during most of the day   .But
I had to make a decision:
I’m due for the next Prolia injection.  Prolia admits even on
the web site, that it CAN affect the immune system.  Feeling nervous, I
cancelled the Priola for now.  
Steroids should slow the immune system when it over-reacts to
something simple.       But HOW long
until the immune system is BACK TO NORMAL?,   
Go back to the doctor?  I
don't want to be in any med waiting rooms with sick folk. I wear a med mask to
the grocery store.  Scared?  I
didn't go to Starbucks for a month!  And when I did get there, suddenly a
big group came in.  I was too freaked out to stay  
Home –lifestyle?  I can't
get the indoor humidity below the upper 50s, which is not good for respiratory
problems.  And I itch.
 
 
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