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allergy shot questions ?

Question:
My three year old daughter began allergy shots a month ago, after being hospitalized twice in a 6 month period with severe asthma following sinus infection due to allergy. She also uses a nebulizer 3 times daily
(intal) and takes DA chewables twice daily. Once, while waiting for her shot, another patient anaphalaxed after his and had to be intubated and transported to the ER. He had been taking shots for years without a problem. How common is this? Are some people more susceptible than others to reaction? Also, after my daughter got her 2 shots Friday, one injection site stayed red and itchy for several hours. By the end of the day, her nose started running and the next day she started coughing. Could this be a result of the shots or most likely just a coincidence? She sees her allergist tomorrow.


Answer:
Allergy shots for a 3-yr old sounds a little unusual to me. My understanding is that allergies at that age are changing rapidly as the immune system develops. I would be concerned about the possibility of anaphylaxis. A young child may not be able to communicate what the shots are doing to them. It might be worth getting a 2nd opinion here from another allergist or asthma doctor. I had allergy shots for 5 years, as an adult, for grass pollen, dust mites, etc. It was my choice to do so. I was told not to exercise before the shot or for 24 hr afterwards. The shots can cause asthma and other allergy symptoms. I had anaphylaxis once after my shots, it happened 90 minutes later as I am a slow reactor. I had started driving home when I felt queasy, drove back to the clinic and they gave me 2 epi shots, my peak flow dropped to 20% of normal. The problem was I had just reached maximum dose after transferring clinics and had not taken my asthma meds that morning because I was having a blood test. However mistakes can happen, they can give you the wrong shot, people have died from allergy shots. You have to weigh the benefits against the risk. I've been getting allergy shots for 10 months now and have only see one person react to a shot (of couse, I'm only there for 30 - 45 minutes once/week, but the office is really busy when I go). I would say, from my unscientific observation, that severe reactions happen, but are not common. Besides, the ER, the Dr.'s office is probably the best place to have an attack (if you have to have one) because there are trained professionals that can start helping you right away. Your daughters reaction could have been caused by the shot. I've had something similar happen to me on a number of occasions. I've also had my arm swell up to the size of a baseball, but it has not caused a severe reaction. Make sure you tell the nurse about the reaction the next time your daughter gets her shots. A reaction means that the dose was too high; the nurse can adjust it. After 10 months, I'm noticing substantial relief (have not had a severe attack or had to go to the ER since I started shots (before the shots, we made a trip to the ER about every other month). I get allergy shots, and have for two years. I've had four severe reactions, and the one thing that kept me from being hospitalized or worse was that I'd stayed to wait to see if there's a reaction, and got ephinephrine right away. Ask your doctor about preventive medicating before the shot (I don't know if Zyrtec is safe for children, but it's what I use.) Also make sure they get their inhalers. Most importantly, though, if she *starts* to have a reaction, get medical help *ASAP.* And whenever I have even a slight reaction, I ask to either stay at the same level or go down one, to be on the safe side. I've never regretted doing this.



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