Monday, July 29, 2013

Update - Remission Continues, My Theories on "Why?"

I am happy to say (and knocking on wood each time I say so) that I continue to be in hives remission. I have been asked recently by a few readers about "what I did" to end them.  I don't think I did anything to end them.  They just seemed to fade away. As I noticed them lessening, I stopped taking antihistamines. And just continued to observe fewer and fewer until they were just gone.

Looking back now, I have 3 current theories on why I had chronic hives:

  1. They were due to a birth control pill?  I started a b.c pill two months before the hives set in. Now, one might think that I would have reacted right away from that, not two months later. But I look at it more as having a "toxicity buildup" effect, meaning if there was something in that drug that my body didn't like, and more of it was built up over time, that's when my body hit a certain threshold and reacted. I also had flushing/rashing/blotching while on it too. I was on that pill until March, but my hives were gone by early December, so how does that make sense?  Maybe my body just finally realized it did not need to have an allergic response, much as our allergy responses change all the time. But the flushing/rashing/blotching continued even after the hives had ended, and when I changed to a new bc pill in March, that went away too. I believe that part of it was hormonal.
  2. They were due to an antidepressant?  I started a new antidepressant for anxiety around the same time that I started the bc pill. As one usually does, I started with a lower dose, and increased it over the next 6 weeks.  Maybe it was at the higher dose that my body reacted to something in the drug -- and again, it just took many, many months before my body desensitized to the allergen and stopped hiving.  I dropped the dose back down in January, which was after the hives had already stopped, and am still on the lower dose today.
  3. They were from an unknown cause and not from the drugs, for a reason maybe never to be known?  Could be that my medication theories are all wrong, and they were just a random occurrence. I have read others' blogs on this topic, and the good news is that most everyone seems to go into remission and stops blogging about it.

If you are currently experiencing active chronic hives, you are not alone in your angst and frustration. But just know that remission will happen at some point, that this will be transient ("this too shall pass"), and that life is constantly changing

My best advice is look at ANYTHING that may have changed in the month or two leading up to your hives.  Soap? Meds? Detergents? Fabric Softener? Lotions? Vitamins? I initially was looking on what I ate or used THAT DAY that the hives appeared, not taking a step back and looking at the bigger picture.

As for me, it is nice to now go sometimes even days without scanning my body for those dreaded wheals. I can't help but wonder if it will stay like this though.