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This patient support community is for discussions relating to airbourne allergies, eye allergies, shots, anaphylaxis, asthma, children's allergies, hives, insect stings, rhinitis, sinuses, and allergies to drugs, foods, and pets.
I hope she didn't just stop taking the BP meds. I'm sure you meant to say she was switched to something else. It would be very dangerous to stop BP meds like that without being under a doctors order to do so.
Rena705 Female, 45 years Edmonton - AB Member since Nov 2007
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I hope she didn't just stop taking the BP meds. I'm sure you meant to say she was switched to something else. It would be very dangerous to stop BP meds like that without being under a doctors order to do so.
Hives are red, itchy welts or swellings on the skin that often come in clusters.Hives can appear anywhere on the body, cropping up either in one small area or covering large patches of skin. They most often occur as part of an allergic reaction. No one lesion lasts more than 24 hours, but new ones may continue to appear until the condition resolves.
Hives are often caused by a hypersensitivity to:
•Foods (commonly eggs, shellfish, nuts, berries, dyes, or other additives)
•Drugs (any drug can touch off an allergic reaction, although allergies to penicillin, sulfa, and aspirin are especially common)
•Pollens and plants (nettles, poison ivy, poison oak, and so on).
Try an over-the-counter antihistamine to reduce your body's response to the irritant and to relieve pain. To soothe itchy skin, try cold compresses, calamine lotion, a cool shower.
If you have hives that linger for six weeks or more, ask your primary care doctor for advice. He or she may refer you to a specialist such as an allergist or immunologist.
ref:http://www.myonlinewellness.com/topic/hivestreatment