Jump to content

Recommended Posts

My youngest has developed a rash down her face, arms and a little on her legs. At its worst it consists of hive lumps but when it calms it becomes flatter and lacy.


GP believes it to be an allergy and has given her anti-histamine.


The rash started on Sat eve after playing in Goose Green play park (opposite St John's Church not the school of the same name) and then flared up dramatically after going back there on Weds.


However her face really flares up in the night too.


She is 3.5yrs with no known allergies and we have been using that park forever and have not introduced any new products / foods at home.


I was thinking it could be the plane tree pollen as that is quite nasty but am just thrown by the fact her face does flare up overnight in bed.


Anyone any ideas what it could be?

I went to Health Matters on LL following a few hours in GG park last week about hayfever remedies as was suffering a bit that day - the lady there asked where I'd been and told me what kind of pollen/plant it was in that park and that it aggravates allergy sufferers - really sorry I can't remember name of it now but might be worth calling them as she seemed v knowledgable about it. Must have been very strong/known to be irritating, my hayfever symptom haven't been bad again since and I've not been back to GG park either.


Hope this is helpful...

You don't need to introduce new foods or materials in order to manifest allergic symtoms. Indeed you don't produce an allergic response until 2nd (or later) exposure to the offending substance. So the substance can easily be something in the common environment at home or elsewhere.


I think the reason "new" foods/materials are frequently associated with allergies are twofold.


(1) Common causes of allergy are obvious and so are quickly eliminated from our environments when we discover them! However, they can crop back up in "disguise" in other products.


(2) You can be exposed to an allergen as one ingredient in a list, for example a preservative in soap. You might never use that type of soap again. However, when you buy a "new" shampoo, if it contains the same preservative, you are then re-exposed to the allergen. So, you appear to produce an allergy to a "new" product, when in fact you have been previously exposed.


I have heard that pollens and molds are high and widespread this year. We've certainly been battling itchy noses around here, which we never normally do. Good luck getting some symptomatic relief. I hope you can discover what's causing the allergy. If you give antihistamines before going to the park or putting your LO to bed, does it help to prevent the allergic response?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • But a larger number, in a more hotly contested election, didn't. It is an anomaly that Starmer won a landslide in seats with a turnout for Labour which would have shamed Labour leaders in all the 21st and much of the post war 20th century.
    • I was not suggesting anything else!   I'm not sure how you interpret what I said  as "irrelevant"? I was responding to a post saying that Corbyn was "unelectable". My point was that a  large number  of the electorate  voted for him!
    • that's exactly what happened - Brickhouse were forced to close due to rent hike and then Gail's didn't move in until covid restrictions lifted and normality resumed. Gail's would have opened much sooner as they were lined up and able to offer the landlord much higher rents. Brickhouse was a local favourite
    • The Brickhouse closed just before Covid December 2019. Nothing to do with Gails muscling in as they didn't move into till December 2022. Stop trying to fit a false narrative into a story
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...