Quote from: SilverLining on November 06, 2013, 06:42:12 AMQuote from: candyguru on November 06, 2013, 12:43:48 AMQuote from: SilverLining on November 05, 2013, 09:03:01 PM
Candyguru, was she in hospital or ambulance when she got the second? Or did you have to administer?
(Just thinking, in twenty minutes the ambulance should be there. If not, we have a problem here.)
The ambulance arrived within about 6 minutes (we had already given her an epi-pen before they arrived). We arrived at North York General, and they gave her another shot (they did not use our epi pen Jr) when we arrived as she needed it (weakness, lower blood pressure, stomach ache, breathing issues).
So the second injection was given in the ER, but had we been outside the city, and more than 20 mins from an ambulance, I would have given the second epi pen even if we could not have reached a doctor to ask, as I have always been informed that an epi pen may wear off in 15 to 20 mins and symptoms could intensify.
I'm not at all questioning whether it would have been appropriate for you to give a second dose yourself.
I was just wanting to be sure the ambulance arrived that quick...because I know they should have.
Quote from: CMdeux on November 06, 2013, 09:49:17 AMQuote
I can literally walk to the ER in less than 20 minutes which I probably should have done instead)
You do know that isn't really a good idea, right? Exercise + allergic reaction = horrible cascade of escalating events.
I second your experience of having EMT's and other first-responders (including ER nurses) not recognize non-cutaneous anaphylaxis symptoms-- we've seen that several times.
If you haven't looked up asthma as anaphylaxis yet, jschwab, I really encourage you to read through some of that information. We have a great collection of articles and several threads on the subject. It's really important to be well-educated on that subject if you're prone to those kinds of reactions from food, because you may be the ONLY person who understands that you're not just experiencing an asthma attack that you can't control with asthma meds.
Quote
I can literally walk to the ER in less than 20 minutes which I probably should have done instead)
Quote from: candyguru on November 06, 2013, 12:43:48 AMQuote from: SilverLining on November 05, 2013, 09:03:01 PM
Candyguru, was she in hospital or ambulance when she got the second? Or did you have to administer?
(Just thinking, in twenty minutes the ambulance should be there. If not, we have a problem here.)
The ambulance arrived within about 6 minutes (we had already given her an epi-pen before they arrived). We arrived at North York General, and they gave her another shot (they did not use our epi pen Jr) when we arrived as she needed it (weakness, lower blood pressure, stomach ache, breathing issues).
So the second injection was given in the ER, but had we been outside the city, and more than 20 mins from an ambulance, I would have given the second epi pen even if we could not have reached a doctor to ask, as I have always been informed that an epi pen may wear off in 15 to 20 mins and symptoms could intensify.
Quote from: Jessica on November 05, 2013, 11:40:26 PMQuote from: SilverLining on November 05, 2013, 10:17:38 PMNot to mention that I'm not even sure you can buy singles anymore. Aren't they always sold in twin packs these days?
CG does not.
My question was not I reference to whether he should have administered to, but rather whether he was required to do it.
ETA: many doctors recommend a person carry two. While there is a risk of a misfire, the main reason to have two is in case you need two, isn't it.
Quote from: SilverLining on November 05, 2013, 09:03:01 PM
Candyguru, was she in hospital or ambulance when she got the second? Or did you have to administer?
(Just thinking, in twenty minutes the ambulance should be there. If not, we have a problem here.)
Quote from: SilverLining on November 05, 2013, 10:17:38 PMNot to mention that I'm not even sure you can buy singles anymore. Aren't they always sold in twin packs these days?
CG does not.
My question was not I reference to whether he should have administered to, but rather whether he was required to do it.
ETA: many doctors recommend a person carry two. While there is a risk of a misfire, the main reason to have two is in case you need two, isn't it.
Quote from: twinturbo on November 05, 2013, 10:37:12 AM
@jschwab. I'm not sure I'm answering your question, I'm not sure there's a centralized question in there. This may or may not be satisfactory.
You ask what we here at FAS (is that correct?) think what someone else should do. That's not a perspective I share. What I find in my experience here at FAS is support from a group that is extremely well versed in both the history of well documented conventional knowledge of IgE-mediated allergies and what is on the bleeding edge of where treatment is going. Many of those here operate by considerable experience, advisement and/or guidance from some of the leaders of immunology research and treatment; rely mainly on published articles (as opposed to op-eds) in well respected journals (not magazines); Code of Federal Regulations, legal decisions, settlements, and agreements; and last but not least hard bought experience. Some of us find our past industry experience is applicable to anaphylaxis management directly or indirectly in the most surprising ways.
I've found that management for an infant, for a special needs toddler, for a young developing boy or girl, for a tween, for a teen, all is different than me as an adult. I've also read enough hard data from enough credible sources to recognize that, as allergen agnostic as I am with so many confirmed allergens that are of clinical significance to my kids, that not all allergens are created equal. That some proteins are more durable, come in a form factor that are more easily spread to contaminate, are much less likely to ever be outgrown, have a significantly higher mortality rate, and have some of the lowest dosages to elicit reactions.
I also know that insurance companies aren't always sympathetic to years of paying $2k plus for every reaction--and that's minimal ambulance plus 4-6 hour stay. And I know even then I'm lucky to be insured in the first place. I know that parents are barely able to work in some cases dealing with school nonsense.
It's a personal decision to eat your allergen in the privacy of your own home. It's a personal decision to eat a food highly contaminated with an extremely potent allergen with a high mortality rate. It's also an extreme disservice for a content farm website for the sake of increasing traffic to publish such horribly dangerous misinformation that is likely to put an individual at higher risk under the guise of "medical advice", especially when it intersects with social pressure from a loved one at developmental ages more prone to that social pressure.
We respect each other's comfort zones, the dynamic factors we must each put in our risk-reward calculus. Unfortunately there is not much traction in this branch of medicine and because its acceptance in the public eye is more closely related to a lifestyle model than disease, our Achilles heel has been co-opted successfully to the point of obscuring IgE-mediation. What does allergy mean? Why is it important? Why must we adhere to standards? Because total avoidance is our only prescriptive choice. There is no high tech answer, nothing to mediate per instance.
I think you'll find why that torch is carried so vigilantly from person to person within a well-read support group who see Sicherer, Wood, Burks, and are more likely to read their research rather than only read what blurbs a magazine author brings into print. With all due respect to the docs I'm more than bleepin' ready to go back to a carefree lifestyle. Give me something else besides total strict avoidance.
In all this I also think we all realize to a certain degree we occupy the bad spot on the bell curve, the area that isn't often studied due to severity. Besides sucking mightily we will be the first ones to tell anyone that was done disservice by a naturopath or IgG or sloppy testing that before they try to live in strict avoidance make sure you actually are allergic. No history, bad testing, eats allergen all the time. Congrats!
As to what individuals should be doing on their own I highly doubt anyone is in great need to judge. What nonsense rears up vying for credibility then dishes out horrible 'medical' advice under a banner that supposedly represents us as a group? Yeah, gonna call bullcrap in response.