Fisherman Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 How does it keep spreading? It started on my right arm, and now its popping up on my left...only in places I had a scrape or scratch. You have cross contanimated yourself by touching diffewrent spots, and for godsakes don't scratch your jewlery bag or johnson.
irishfield Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 Don't play in the rose garden either..
Sinker Posted October 3, 2013 Author Report Posted October 3, 2013 Ha....the rose garden has been gone for a long time Wayne. Life is sooo much better now LOL S.
4x4bassin Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 Make sure you wash all contaminated clothing really well . The oil off the leaves of the plant can stay on your clothes for a long time if you don't wash that crap off. I actually caught it in the middle of winter from wearing a jacket that was contaminated with the oil . I get the blisters by just looking at the stuff It is a brutal thing to get especially on your feet so be careful . Like others have said as well wash the area and keep it dry . When I use to get it really bad I use to wash the infected area with bleach (old timers remedy) , stung like crazy but it was better than the itch and it seemed to dry it out .
Headhunter Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 As has been said, get it once and you will be getting it from this point forward. Aveno bath works well and for the love of all thing good, keep yer hands off yer other body parts until you are symptom free... you are just spreading the crap all over yourself. My brother only has to be in the same county as poison oak and he gets it... that, from many camping trips to the Pinery where I am sure the MNR test plants the stuff! Sinker, you have managed to avoid the stuff for many years, that time is now passed. HH
Gnote Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 I do not have medical research on this so use at your own risk. I used to get it real bad but the last couple times it was a little here little there I scratched it with a beer cap and poured rubbing alcohol on it. It felt awesome, it died, and did not itch again Warning!!! I did this on my feet and legs which are pretty scarred and scratched anyways and i dont know if this is bad or not but if i get it again this is what ill do. Good luck
highdrifter Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 Thank your lucky stars it wasn't hogs bush... That stuff is naaaasty.
Dave Bailey Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 I've heard good things about Betamethasone, but I don't know about its availability. Since it can cross the placenta, make sure you're not pregnant. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betamethasone
Sinker Posted October 3, 2013 Author Report Posted October 3, 2013 Thank your lucky stars it wasn't hogs bush... That stuff is naaaasty. You mean giant hogweed, right? I haven't seen that stuff yet, but know all about it. S.
Sinker Posted October 3, 2013 Author Report Posted October 3, 2013 I've rounded up a bunch of jewelweed to try, but Its getting worse, and now swollen too. Loveley.... S.
Walleye'm Fishing Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 I get it several times a year. It's now to the point where it doesn't really bother me anymore as I have it most of the summer months. When it's a little annoying, I'll use rubbing alcohol. Once it dries, I'll put on some calamine lotion. If it gets bad, I'll buy some over the counter cortisone cream. If it's out of control, I go to my doc and he'll prescribe cortisone pills which makes everything go away.
highdrifter Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 You mean giant hogweed, right? I haven't seen that stuff yet, but know all about it. S. That's the stuff. Had an unfortunate run in with the plant a coupla years ago... The wound I received was severe to say the least... I had to replace my gauze every day for at least 2 weeks. Serves me right for hucking it in the bushes!
Moosebunk Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 Herbal or Eastern treatments... Dunno. Western... working with an incredibly intelligent ER Physician right now... worst case P.I. treatments often do well with tapered doses of oral Prednisone, Calamine lotion, and/or for unblistered sites, Cortisone based creams. Now that you've got it once, (become sensitive, or more sensitive to it) you will continue to get it. Poison Ivy reaction occurs within about the first hour of contact with the leaf. You have about that time to best wash it off with warm soapy water... or cold. If you touch an area of contact (ie. clothes) and touch somewhere else, (ie, sweaty forehead, weiner, whatever) you are likely to get it there. If you develop blisters, the fluid within (weeping out) can spread to more sites from that contact. At the blistered stage there is a low incidence of communicability, higher incidence of you spreading to more areas on yourself. If clothes worn, or pet remains unwashed, it could cause later reactions in another area. Smaller incidence of reoccurrence or new sites if say, leaf to clothes to car seat to skin were to happen, but that's slim Also, with a very small percentage of people poison ivy can "possibly" spread internally, and with those people only an internally administered medication will help.
lew Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 I never get poison ivy bad, but I get it often. We've got lots of it in the woods behind my place and the pooch runs through it all the time, then I play with him and end up with it. Usually just on my hands and it's very easily looked after with Calamine.
manitoubass2 Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 Funny how eveyone reacts differently, even to the treatments. I just had my first run in wit stinging nettle two weeks back, talk about a b**** for about 12 hours
Dave Bailey Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 Never reacted to poison ivy until I turned 30. I occasionally rolled in it for giggles, gave my Sergeant Major fits. Now I get it bad.
dave524 Posted October 3, 2013 Report Posted October 3, 2013 As a kid I was hyper sensitive to poison ivy. I could get it off the hounds, direct contact of course, even from the smoke of burning a field. Lost school time cause it was in my nose, eyes , face after the smoke episode. Parents and I were desparate and a doctor in Welland gave me a series of shots, 4, I think a week or so apart. Since that I may have had a couple of quarter sized patches that might have been poison ivy. For me it was a cure. That would have been in the mids 60's however Google search of poison ivy vaccine shows it has been withdrawn years ago as ineffective only temporay effect, they never asked me
singingdog Posted October 4, 2013 Report Posted October 4, 2013 The next time you, or someone you know, can get to the states, buy some Teknu. It washes off the oil (uroshiol), which is super hard to wash off with anything else. Uroshiol stays active for months after it gets on something (skin, sleeping bag, clothing, dog), and can keep causing a reaction each time you touch it. Dogs are great for causing a reaction for months after you haven't been anywhere near PI. I am one of those folks that has a really bad reaction to PI. Since I started using Teknu (many parks departments in the states require it's use by employees) I have never had it bother me for more than a day.
Sinker Posted October 4, 2013 Author Report Posted October 4, 2013 The jewelweed is definitly working. I did one arm with it earlier today, and its already noticeable. That said, I'm covered in the stuff now. Spots on my legs, swollen arms...friggen sucks! Might have to get something prescription now. What a PITA!! S.
gogu392 Posted October 5, 2013 Report Posted October 5, 2013 I just had it one week ago. I got it from camping, my daughter, my wife and me. I did tried: calamine, vinegar. These remedy works but to get rid of it fast: 1) wash all your clothes, bed lengerie 2) I did wash my body with baking soda and dishwasher detergent, make a cream of both and cover you body and let it dissolve the Uroshiol (you need a really strong soap to wash off the Uroshiol) - I did not know about Teknu 3) The oil can be taken under fingernails and spread on different body part, it happen to me, I start to scratch a mosquito bite and I spread it. 4) You have to stop scratch it. The good thing is that once go away no sign are left on the skin
Sinker Posted October 5, 2013 Author Report Posted October 5, 2013 The jewelweed seems to be working. I took a couple bendryls this morning, and been squeezing the jewelweed juice on regularily. Its getting better! S.
singingdog Posted October 5, 2013 Report Posted October 5, 2013 The jewelweed is great for relieving the symptoms, but does nothing to get rid of the uroshiol. Make sure that you have cleaned it off of anything that can cause re-exposure: clothing, sleeping bag, dog (one of the biggest culprits for re-exposure)
farsider Posted May 29, 2014 Report Posted May 29, 2014 (edited) The next time you, or someone you know, can get to the states, buy some Teknu. It washes off the oil (uroshiol), which is super hard to wash off with anything else. Uroshiol stays active for months after it gets on something (skin, sleeping bag, clothing, dog), and can keep causing a reaction each time you touch it. Dogs are great for causing a reaction for months after you haven't been anywhere near PI. I am one of those folks that has a really bad reaction to PI. Since I started using Teknu (many parks departments in the states require it's use by employees) I have never had it bother me for more than a day. Just started to see more endorsements of this product lately. Remembered this thread... It can probably be found cheaper than MEC but, posted this to prove its availability locally. Careful of spelling. Tecnu http://www.mec.ca/product/5023-745/oak-n-ivy-tecnu-outdoor-skin-cleanser-355ml/ Cheers, Mark Edited May 29, 2014 by farsider
adempsey Posted May 29, 2014 Report Posted May 29, 2014 Have you tried an oral anti-histamine, like Benadryl? Apparently Burt's Bees makes a poison ivy soap that contains jewelweed.
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