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Can someone please explain to me what happens to the body if you get stung by a bee and you are allergic?


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Post On: 2008-09-23 23:09:03

 Can someone please explain to me what happens to the body if you get stung by a bee and you are allergic?
User: The One Who Rocks...
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on sunday my husband go stung by a bee, and 30 mins later he is having confultions, foaming at the mouth, 911 was titled and he was at the emergency room all night, i am still in shock over the experience and i intellection he was gone... it was crazy, he is doing substantially today and attractive meds at home, they explained it to me but i don't remember what they said, nothing registered please explain what happened to him
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 Post On: 2008-09-23 23:12:59
User: NYC BOY!
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under the skin, the female may hit immediate reactions (those symptoms first within 4 hours), suspended reactions (symptoms that don't materialize until more than quaternary hours after the sting), or both. Classifying the reactions is important both for immediate management and for predicting forthcoming problems (Allergy Principles and Practice, Mosby 2003). Some immediate reactions are classified as local (a two - or three-inch area of swelling, redness and discompose that lasts less than 24 hours). Others remember as large local reactions (those that are larger -- ofttimes an whole limb -- or that last longer, but all symptoms are conterminous to stings). Systemic reactions are hypersensitised responses distant from the injury and allow symptoms such as hives, unspecialised itching, unspecialised swelling, low murder pressure, difficulty breathing, or anaphylactic shock -- a severe activity involving most or all of these symptoms. A injury on the forehead with symptom of the eyelids is a large local reaction, while a injury on the foot with symptom of the eyelids is a systemic reaction. Large local reactions are rarely serious and rarely portend forthcoming severe allergies. Systemic hypersensitised reactions, though, are present and forthcoming warning signs. A ordinal type of immediate activity is the cyanogenic reaction, which can follow multiple stings. This is a direct result of bee venom, and not an hypersensitised reaction. Symptoms can allow fever, weakness, nausea, vomiting, and pain. Toxic reactions are rarely serious, but do sometimes sensitize the female and recognize forthcoming hypersensitised reactions. Delayed reactions result when the body's insusceptible system prepares for forthcoming stings, but some of the profuse defense measures inadvertently turn against the body itself. These symptoms begin more than quaternary hours after the initial sting. Delayed reactions allow serum sickness (fever, weakness, rash, swelling, and/or intense itching which begin a week after the sting), nephrotic syndrome (inflammation of the kidney), neuritis (inflammation of the nerves), or rousing of other parts of the body.
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 Post On: 2008-09-23 23:14:15
User: emtd65
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He had a classic allergic reaction. http://www.webmd.com/allergies/guide/anaphylaxis
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 Post On: 2008-09-23 23:18:16
User: thickstickit
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my brother turns blue in the face his throte swells up and he cant breath.he has to make trusty there are shots around he has to inject if he ever gets stung
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 Post On: 2008-09-23 23:18:17
User: doomjockey
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hmmm...short version: when something is introduced into your embody that it producens allergens to, from that saucer on you are allergic to it. solon than other substances, and whatever grouping hit more nonindulgent reactions than others. Well your embody as smart as it is, is also very stupid...when it comes in your embody sends these lowercase things to eat up all the lowercase thingies that trigger the reaction, but in the process of intake it these lowercase cells blow up and promulgation HISTAMINE and cause inflammation...everywhere. Histamine is used to fight intense things, but unfortunately histamine kills you. thats ground you swell up and the poorest places are your throat/lungs so you end up not being able to breath. Then sometimes (in your husbands case) I would assume it was so intense it caused his brain to go F*ing haywire possibly causing him to hit a seizure. thats ground anti-histamines are used when your sick...blocks the promulgation of histamine because its stupid.
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 Post On: 2008-09-23 23:52:39
User: 3sa
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http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/AA159
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 Post On: 2008-09-24 15:37:17
User: galloppal
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Your economise has probably been stung by a bee in the past, and had a secondary reaction to the sting. This allowed his allergy to the bee venom to develop. This time, his body overreacted to the venom and a chemical called histamine was free in massive amounts, which dilates blood vessels and can display damper (called anaphylactic shock) and also produces swelling and spasm of the larynx. The larynx is a part of the airway, so when it swells, breathing is impaired, and can be all blocked. In the future, he should circularize an epi enclosure with him, and know how to use it. The Dr. can write a prescription for it. The take it delivers is adrenalin (epinephrine), and module counter the histamine salutation and could save his life. It is an injection that he can give to himself easily if he is stung by a bee again.
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