I have trouble w/ the long hair breeds. Just being around them makes my eyes swell & itch. My head clogs up and after a while I snart sneezing . Getting away and taking Benadryle followed by a hot shower usualy clears it up.
Go have your kid tested for allergies.
2006-06-18 07:29:13
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answer #1
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answered by S.A.M. Gunner 7212 6
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I'm highly allergic to cats!
Until the age of 6, I was cared for on weekdays by a woman with a cat and I spent a lot of time on Dimetapp. My symptoms were sniffling and sneezing, tearing and itchy eyes, sometimes coughing.
After my babysitter moved away, I was not around another cat (even once) for a couple of years. Then my neighbor got kittens and I was playing with them (petting) and I broke out in hives wherever my skin touched them.
When I was 14, I had allergy testing and I did not react to the test for cats. But, from the time I was a child, until now (21 years old), I unfailingly have some level of a reaction to cat dander.
Being in the same room as a cat, or sitting on a sofa/carpet that a cat was on, will trigger sneezing, itchy/watery eyes, red cheeks, often even asthma. Touching a cat will cause hives.
I tell you all this so that you understand that the symptoms and severity of a reaction can change over time. And to point out that the testing wasn't 100% accurate. Even if the allergy test is negative, trust the symptoms!
Also, a lot of people feel that a child will become desensitized to the allergen if they are exposed to it enough. This is obviously not always the case as I spent the first 6 years of my life playing with a cat every day.
Many people "grow out" of their allergies as they reach their teens. I hope that your daughter does if she does in fact turn out to be allergic to cats! :)
2006-06-18 19:36:05
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answer #2
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answered by Shelly 1
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because of the proteins in a cat's saliva and skin glands are the allergens that cause people to have common allergic symptoms such as sneezing and asthmaand also which measured the amount of allergens released by a cat, found that a sharp increase in cat allergens released into the air could be detected within minutes of a cat's entering a room. The increase was great enough to cause a person to have a bronchial attack in less than half an hour.
2006-06-19 00:29:53
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answer #3
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answered by Shiela 2
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whenever I'm around them my eyes start itchin and i start sneezing alot...my nose sometimes starts running too. i have noticed that if i am around cats with longer hair it doesnt take as long for those symptoms to appear. i have a cousin that has a dairy farm with a barn full of short haired cats (and cows obviously!) and sometimes i can stand in the barn for a while without any symptoms. when i do get those symptoms it only takes about half an hour for the symptoms to completly go away...sometimes less. i dont think my cat allergy is too severe though...i actually havent been diagnosed by a doctor because i am hardly ever around cats
2006-06-18 13:43:47
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answer #4
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answered by You Betcha! 6
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Nope, should not be linked. If no allergies have been obvious, then it truly is not linked - fainting isn't even pertaining to to allergies, except your throat is swelling and you faint. even yet it may must be happening for an prolonged time, and he or she could have mentioned some thing. There must be another reason she fainted, however. i'm no scientific examiner, so i won't be able to tell you what it truly is. Your fiance is sturdy, by making use of the way - tell her "sturdy pastime"! no longer many people comprehend that the dander is a sprint distinctive. And, even some cats have distinctive dander than others - i'm allergic to cats, yet i admire them so I even have 2. One irritates me lots extra advantageous than the different - they are the comparable breed, yet categories (a Seal factor and a Blue factor Siamese). I in user-friendly terms got here upon this out by making use of conversing to my allergist approximately it, however.
2016-10-31 02:20:48
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answer #5
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answered by rangnow 4
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There can be severe or just acute symptoms if you are allergic to cats, it really depends on who the person is.
My friend who is allergic to cats, even has them, but she only gets itchy eyes, a runny nose, and other cold like symptoms.
My other friend on the other hand, her eyes get swollen shut, her airways become blocked and she has difficulties breathing.
I would take your daughter to an allergy test, it is the smartest thing to do.
2006-06-18 07:36:07
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answer #6
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answered by coolkittenwinx 4
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I learned I was allergic when I went to a friend's home for dinner. My eyes were itching and it was really bad but when I went to the dining table and sat down, my eyes watered and my sinuses plugged up and I had to excuse myself. I went to the washroom and washed my face and came back and it started all over again - I was sitting on the cat's favourite chair.
2006-06-18 15:18:28
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answer #7
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answered by MillwoodsGal 6
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I am allergic to cats and i get a runny nose, sneezing, and eyes are watery around them
2006-06-19 08:36:51
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answer #8
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answered by qwerty 4
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My whole family is allergic to cats. We have 5 cats ( 1 regular 4 kittens), and we're always itching and sneezing and sometimes coffing.
2006-06-19 13:33:42
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answer #9
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answered by eldude 2
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when i am around cats, my eyes swell and turn red, my throat begins to swell, and i eventually lose my voice. symptoms don't go away for about 3 days after i remove myself from the cat. this happens whether the cat is present or not - all it takes is the dander.
2006-06-18 07:48:52
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answer #10
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answered by luckyp 2
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