Thursday, November 19, 2009

Chronic Urticaria More Condition_symptoms How To Get Rid Of Chronic Urticaria?

How to get rid of chronic urticaria? - chronic urticaria more condition_symptoms

I suffer from chronic hives for about 3 1 / 2 years. I went to the dermatologist again in 05 and was told it was an allergic reaction to a mosquito bite. Medicines and gave me hives, but never leave. Do you think it could be an allergic reaction to something else? and what are the things you can do to try to get rid of them?

2 comments:

sailor said...

I had hives for 10 years. Finally rid of them and are free to stick close to 7 years. I took claritin or Advair, Serevent and checked my hives for most. An allergist is what you want to take drugs because they are more likely to try different combinations until you find something that works. Zyrtec, Doxepin, Singulair are just some of the drugs could be tested.

Anyway, my hives went away when I went on a gluten-free diet. After about 1.5 months I was not hives, stop my medication and never more hives, but I remain free of gluten.

Before switching to a gluten-free diet for celiac disease will have been tested by your doctor. If the test is positive, then follow a gluten-free diet and symptoms should dissipate. If the test is negative, you can try a gluten-free diet to see if you have a non-celiac gluten intolerance or wheat allergy. The gluten-free diet will not work, probably 10 percent of patients in the hive. Have a gluten-free multivitamin and Omega Complex capsules per day.

Easiest way to a gluten-free diet trial only eats fruits and vegetables, meat that is not fresh or processed fish, eggs and cheese. Add the potatoes and rice starch. Avoid sauces and seasonings, until you learn to read labels and find where hidden gluten. You can search for gluten-free pasta and bread later, if the plan works for you.

Good luck and if you have any questions for me, contact me here.

J B said...

Make an appointment with an allergist. If you still sticks so far that need to experiment to find the culprit and you can do a allergy specialist.

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