Eczema Free Forever™ Eczema Free Forever™

Don’t give up on me… I’m still here!

I feel so bad. I’ve been neglecting you all. But please rest assured I haven’t gone anywhere and I still have loads of plans for useful and helpul blogs all piling up just waiting to be written.

Lots has been going on behind the scenes. I’ve been redesigning the whole What Allergy blog so very soon it will have a fresh new look and feel. I hope you like the new version and please let me know any ideas, thoughts of improvements we could make to the site.

It is kind of my life’s work. My hobby. My baby. And it’s mostly only me who writes the blog, apart from the odd guest blogger, which is actually something I’d like to do more of in the coming months so watch out for great things from some other experts in different fields later in the year.

The main reason I haven’t been writing so much is just the usual pace of life and emotions taking up all that lovely creative blogging bit of my brain hostage. But I’m back!

The other reason is that I recently had the worst allergic reaction of my life whilst away on a business trip in America. I plan to write lots about this when I’m ready but at the moment I’m feeling kind of overpowered by the most crippling fear and rage. I am so angry.

Angry with allergies.
Angry with anaphylaxis.
Why have I got this?
How can a tiny bit of dairy in a muffin do such terrible things to my body?
Will the next mistake be the last one?
Because there will be a next time.
We are all only human. We all make mistakes.
I cannot and refuse to live my life in a bubble.

But mostly I am absolutely furious with the restaurant who did this to me.
I know it was a mistake and they have apologised, profusely but I’m so angry.

I am also so very, very grateful to the paramedics and staff at the hospital who treated me. They saved my life.

And forever thankful to my friends and colleagues who were there with me, holding my hand and looking after me.

I will write more when I can. But for now, leave me with my rage! 🙁

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Oatly, Oatly everywhere and now I’m hooked

Have you noticed? Oatly is everywhere. In the newspaper, on advertising hoardings, in the shops, in my fridge and now, now I even have a tshirt! For those of you who are not familiar with Oatly, they make a range of plant milk products from oats including milk, cream, custard etc.

Oatly oat milk advertising hoarding in london

Oatly is the dairy free alternative for savvy baristas

I just love this billboard advertisement: We made this mural instead of an instagram post. Hope a barista goes past and sees it 🙂

Ask for it in your local coffee shot – there is a new barista style oatly coffee (referred to above) which is apparently great for frothing! But do beware – if you are really allergic to dairy the frother may very well be contaminated by cow’s milk.

Even with Nutribrex

With Nutribrex and lots of fruit I am finally braving my old horror, milk on weetabix… yuk! It has always made my fearful of adding milk to Nutribrex but it is nothing like the former horrors. Weetabix was not for me, my body must have known wheat was not my friend. The consistency of milk on weetabix with that sloppy, soggy mess used to be my all time worst breakfast. Nutribrex is a gluten free alternative to Weetabix made from sorhum and it’s yummy and really healthy. I had been enjoying Nutribrex with dairy free yogurt – which also works really well, but now I can have it with Oatly oat milk too, and heaps of fresh fruit of course, which makes it much easier to finish the carton myself.

It is now also my favourite milk to enjoy in coffee. It doesn’t separate and curdle like some plant milks and gives a really lovely colour. I still love my coffee black, but if I have some Oatly in the fridge I’m happy to use this as it doesn’t add too much sweetness to the coffee flavour and goes really well. Try it and see! and I cannot wait to try the barista variety with my frother.

Oatly plant milk - the Post Milk Generation

Oatly plant milk – the Post Milk Generation

If you live in London you may have seen the advertisements, like the one above, seen near Liverpool Street station. My sister also found a pop up kiosk recently where she was given a free tshirt for trying the oatly milk in her coffee. I am now the proud owner of said tshirt. What a lovely sister I have 🙂

Have you tried Oatly? How do you like yours? Anyone tried the frothy milk?

#wownocow
#postmilkgeneration
#oatlyfreefrom
#plantmilk

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I’m her worst allergy! No I’M her worst allergy…

This is a silly blog inspired by a cartoon I saw recently of a glass of red wine arguing with a lovely mug of black coffee about who she loved the most.

She loves me more! said the angry glass of red wine.
She loves ME more! spat back the jealous mug of steaming black coffee.

It made me think about what my worst allergies would say if they could talk.

Peanut allergy meets Dairy allergy

Sorry Dairy, I think Peanut wins this fight. Definitely my worst allergy!

Sorry Dairy, I think Peanut wins this fight. Definitely my worst allergy!

I do apologise to any readers looking for inspiration or to learn something today. All you’ve learned is that I enjoy drawing very bad cartoons sometimes.

I get very weird ideas for blogs and I also need to buy a new rubber.

You also now know which of my allergies is the worst.

The peanut here had to be mean because that’s the allergy I fear the most. If I even smell a peanut my body goes into a kind of alert state. Every part of me is wary when I catch a waft of that most revolting of nuts.

Hope it made you smile anyway. Which is your worst allergy? and what would yours say?

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‘I’M STILL STANDING – (ME ‘N ELTON!)

… And Breathing! Reasons to be cheerful – thanks to Derby Royal Hospital I finally was given the correct diagnosis and, importantly, excellent treatment from the team of Consultants in the Respiratory Clinic, which means my breathing is the best it’s ever been!

Reasons to be cheerful – thanks to Derby Royal Hospital I finally was given the correct diagnosis and, importantly, excellent treatment from the team of Consultants in the Respiratory Clinic, which means my breathing is the best it’s ever been!

After All This Time!

Problem is – everything else seems to be going wrong!  As the wonderful team at Royal Derby had successfully removed the fungal ball (covering about a third of my lung) and ‘dampened down’ my allergic reaction to spores (no more plugs blocking my bronchi), I fully expected to be back to ‘my normal’.  Didn’t happen – so, considered that as my condition had become critical, it may take quite some time for recovery and exercised patience – but it’s now over twelve months since commencement of treatment.

The fatigue continues, despite balancing keeping myself active with pacing myself, (light) exercise, healthy diet, and intake of numerous vitamins.  I was told at my last appointment that this was not likely to be a symptom (or result) of ABPA but, to my mind, it seems too coincidental.  Having now read up on this, it does appear to be a symptom that many with the condition suffer from – and the consultants I am seeing are respiratory experts, so this may be outside of their ‘realm’.  Mainly in order to discount this being as a result of another condition, I requested a thyroid test, along with my usual blood tests and the results have been returned satisfactory.  So, I guess I shall have to continue to pace myself and accept the changes.  As I can no longer take care of my fruit shrubs and need to reduce garden maintenance, I’ve now had them removed and the bottom of the garden gravelled.

Asthma or Aspergillosis?

Another reason to be cheerful is my otherwise healthy genes, which have given me the strength to endure all the years without diagnosis / treatment!  Bottom line is, though, if you can’t breathe, little else matters.

Since my teens, I have been told that I have asthma – and this was a question put to me when ABPA was suspected – saying there is a link between diagnosed asthma sufferers and aspergillosis.  Many of the articles I have read support this view.  However, I’ve always doubted that I ever had asthma (the ‘symptoms’ were sporadic and the prescribed inhalers didn’t do much for me) – and now I am convinced of it!  There was never any diagnostic test to prove the case, merely a GP saying that my breathing difficulties were caused by asthma.  I do vaguely remember blowing into a bit of plastic tube, which supposedly measures strength of breath, but I don’t think this could really be called an effective diagnostic tool!

This leads me to believe that the label of ‘asthma’ may be given too freely and that condition, therefore, over-diagnosed – and that had I (and possibly many others) had the opportunity of further, early, investigation, the true diagnosis may have been reached many years before the condition became critical.  So, my laypersons’ advice to those who consider themselves to possibly be at risk of a condition other than asthma, is to seek further investigation.  The earlier a correct diagnosis is made, the less risk of serious and potentially fatal damage to the lungs.

My Love / Hate Relationship with Steroids:

I absolutely love steroids – I felt almost immediate positive results and, after six months high dosage, the fungal ball in my lungs had disappeared (leaving only minimal scarring) – and almost all other symptoms disappeared.  What’s not to love?….

Of course, I read all the possible side-effects, which included risk of glaucoma and cataracts, but had no choice in taking the medication.  For many years my eyesight has remained unchanged.  However, last week I had my annual check and, although my eyesight remains unchanged – yes, you’ve guessed it – I have the start of cataracts on both eyes and first indications of glaucoma (both conditions shown on the scan)!  On my optician’s advice (due to my family history of glaucoma, use of steroids and scan indications), I now pay just £6.00 per month for any number of scans throughout the year (should I notice any difference or have concerns), in order to monitor the situation.  At this stage, no surgery or medication is required.  Just have to ‘keep an eye on it’!

Feeling like a true survivor…

For more info on this subject:

http://www.talkhealthpartnership.com/talkrespiratory/

http://www.aspergillus.org.uk/

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