I have a girl friend who had a similar problem. She went into the hot tub and develop a rash all over her skin. The Nylon in she swim suit was the cause. Try using a cotton swim suit.
I just got a rash from a hot tub that i frequent often. It feels like a bad sun burn and then dries out my skin while pins and needles feel like theyre pricking me. Ive had it since yesterday and the redness of it is still there. Ive found that it is due to poor pH level vs chlorine levels in the hot tub. You might want to check and make very sure that the levels are all appropriate, and if you changed to chlorine recently they shouldve told you to sanatize so that bromine was gone completely because the two chemicals interact.
thank you for your quick response. It seems that the diagnosis you listed would be something that my husband would have seen in the past. He has spent many hours over the years (recent years also) in hot tubs with absolutely no issues. He also works in the out of doors so is exposed to the summer heat and humidity on a regular basis, also with no adverse effects. This is why this particular issue is causing us so much concern. The dermatologist seen has had him on clobex spray and lotion for over 4 weeks - we had to stop it because of adverse side effects but even that did not clear the issue and again - it shows up almost immediately after using the tub. He is also using zyrtec on a daily basis as requested by the dr.
Hi,
This does seem to be an allergic reaction, maybe to the water or probably to the
temperature of the water. There is a condition called physical allergy where the person can react to heat, cold, sunlight etc.
Cholinergic urticaria is a subcategory of physical urticaria ( hives) that is a skin rash brought on by a hypersensitive reaction to body heat. Symptoms follow any stimulus to sweat such as exercise, heat from the sun, saunas, hot showers (reaction to water can also indicate water urticaria) or any stimulus that causes an increase in body temperature.
All urticarias are caused by an elevated histamine release by the body's mast cells. With cholinergic urticaria the exact triggering mechanism for this response is unknown, but it is assumed to be related to the body's thermoregulatory response.
The rash typically develops within a few minutes of a rise in body temperature but can take longer to appear visibly on the skin. It can last from a half an hour to several hours.
Drug treatment is typically in the form of antihistamines such as loratadine (Claritin), hydroxyzine, cetirizine. Applying cold water or an ice pack to the skin can abort an outbreak of the rash.
Ref:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cholinergic_urticaria