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Allergy To Water
Is it possible to be allergic to water?
BY LAURIE L. DOVE
When Alexandra Allen was 12, she did what most kids do when they're on a family
vacation: She went for a swim in the hotel pool.
Unlike
most kids, though, Alexandra had a severe reaction to her swim.
Her
skin broke out in angry, itchy welts just a few short hours after leaving the
water.
What
began as an ordinary summer day ended in an eventual diagnosis that would
change Allen's life.
She
shelved her dreams of living on a sailboat and working as a marine
biologist after discovering she was allergic to water [source: Neporent].
An
allergy to water seems like an improbable condition.
After
all, water is a chief chemical component in the human body, accounting for at
least 60 percent of the average person's weight.
Water
whisks toxins out of critical organs, ferries nutrients to hungry cells and
creates the humid conditions needed for ear, nose and throat health.
In
short, water is essential to life [source: Mayo Clinic].
In
the case of water allergies, only the skin is affected.
People
with this condition can still safely drink water.
It's
only when water of any temperature or origin touches the skin that a
hypersensitive allergic reaction occurs.
The
condition, known as aquagenic urticaria, is called an
"allergy" but isn't medically classified as a true allergy.
It's
actually an allergy-like reaction that belongs to a subset of physical
urticaria, a group of conditions characterized by hives or welts that arise from
stimulation of the skin.
In
the case of aquagenic urticaria, red, swollen, itchy bumps form when water
touches the skin.
This
histamine reaction isn't directed at the water itself, but is most likely a
reaction to a water-soluble antigen that stimulates antibodies.
Any
type of water — distilled, tap or rain — will cause an outbreak almost
immediately and can make bathing or getting caught outside in a rainstorm a
torturous proposition.
Aquagenic
urticaria is so rare that fewer than 100 occurrences have been recorded in
medical literature since the first cases were described in 1964.
It
affects women more than men and most often begins in puberty.
It's
usually diagnosed by putting the skin into prolonged contact with water.
In
Allen's case, physicians asked her to soak in a tub of water to diagnose the
condition.
The
cause of water "allergies" still eludes experts.
One
theory is that sweat glands could be the culprit. It's possible that sweat
glands in certain people produce a toxin that leads to an allergic reaction
with water.
While
researchers remain unsure of the root cause of the condition, most cases can be
treated with antihistamines and controlled by avoiding contact with water as
much as possible.
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