Quote from: CMdeux on November 15, 2013, 11:37:21 PM
I think that where this gets tricky is that "asthma" is a symptom, basically-- the only question is whether it is a LOCALIZED one (from an inhaled allergen or other trigger) or a generalized/systemic one (illness, systemic allergic reaction). That's the exact same distinction between a localized skin reaction to something you've been in CONTACT with at the site of irritation, versus hives distributed in locations where you have NOT had contact with an allergen.
At some point, the distinction between "asthma or allergy" doesn't even matter-- you just treat what is presenting. Assume local first unless you have a good reason not to, and if you don't get a good response to rescue meds on that basis, move to more aggressive treatment that crosses into treating "systemic/generalized" triggers.
My DD has had systemic reactions that were truly indistinguishable from asthma-- with one VERY important difference: they don't respond to rescue inhalers. Scary, no?
Quote from: CMdeux on November 15, 2013, 10:52:49 PM
That reminds me!
Connecting "FA Action Plan" with "Asthma Action Plan"
Lisa, both you and jschwab should probably take a look at that thread-- there are some terrific resources which are highly specific for evaluating that kind of reaction in particular.
Also worth noting that a disproportionate number of fatal (or near-fatal) reactions tend to be NON-CUTANEOUS (that is, no skin symptoms). It's not clear if they are just not recognized as soon, or if they are mismanaged as a result, or if there is something inherently more dangerous about that kind of reaction to begin with, but it is worth bearing in mind either way.
It also seems to be true (though I'm basing this on anecdote from this community's reports over the years) that teens and adults tend to LOSE those cutaneous symptoms over time-- the majority of the time teens and adults have NOT got hives with an allergic reaction, in other words. My DD definitely started out always manifesting hives during reactions, but they diminished and she very rarely gets them now. Only two of her four grade IV-V reactions have featured them-- the one at 11mo and the one at 2yo. The one at 7yo did not, and neither did the one at 11yo. She's had a number of grade III-IV reactions that didn't, either.
Her reactions have gotten MORE asthma-like with age.
Mine are usually asthma/spaciness/gastrointestinal, too.
Quote from: rebekahc on November 15, 2013, 10:18:25 AM
3. It seems to me that it would be odd to suddenly develop asthma as an adult. I have to wonder if she's having environmental exposure to whatever it is she's allergic to that's causing the asthma symptoms.