cellio: (lilac)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2005-08-08 06:02 pm
Entry tags:

allergy attack

I'm allergic to Pennsic. (Well, to dust and grass and pollen and weeds and...) So I take Allegra for about three weeks each year to deal with that, but don't take it the rest of the year. (I don't want to develop a resistance to it like I did to all previous allergy drugs save one [1].)

This year I started taking it on Saturday, and then went to Cooper's Lake Sunday for setup. I was fine yesterday, but today I've been congested all day. Mid-day I added Sudafed to the mix; I hope that wasn't bad but I really needed to treat the symptoms. (I take the Allegra once a day and had taken it this morning.) It took about four hours for the Sudafed to produce results.

I think this must have happened in the past, because there's Sudafed in with my use-only-at-Pennsic stuff. Now that I think about it, I remember once calling my doctor from Pennsic to ask if taking Sudafed while taking Allegra would kill me and he said it wouldn't.

I don't know if starting the Allegra earlier would help; how long does it have to be coursing through your veins to lay down a basic barrier against the nasty little allergens? With luck, writing this entry will help me remember next year to start earlier. (I'm sort of assuming that I should be taking allergy drugs (Allegra) and not cold drugs (Sudafed) as a baeline. I don't have a cold; I just have some of the symptoms.)

I should remember to ask my doctor if he can improve on this for me.

[1] Seldane. It worked gloriously, better than Allegra I think, so naturally the FDA eventually decided I couldn't have it.
geekosaur: orange tabby with head canted 90 degrees, giving impression of "maybe it'll make more sense if I look at it this way?" (Default)

[personal profile] geekosaur 2005-08-08 10:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I recall their recommmending taking it 1-2 weeks ahead, since the time it takes to reach full potency varies. (Of course, they'd also like you to take — and pay for — more of it....)

I also seem to recall that Allegra and Seldane both are metabolized into the same actual antihistamine, but Allegra is less effectively metabolized. (Whereas Seldane is simultaneously metabolized via another pathway to something that causes heart attacks (or was it strokes?) in some percentage of people, or something like that.) I didn't pay too much attention, since it turned out that I don't even digest it. (Oy. On the other hand, it also turned out that antihistamines don't help me, so it's all irrelevant.)

[identity profile] sethcohen.livejournal.com 2005-08-09 12:27 am (UTC)(link)
As a result of the drug-drug interactions Seldane and Hismanal exhibited, there was serious research done into what drugs also cause Q-T prolongation. Neither Seldane or Hismanal alone were risky if taken alone, but people rarely take just one pharmaceutical product...so the drugs came off the market.

[identity profile] sethcohen.livejournal.com 2005-08-09 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
Allegra is what Seldane is metabolized into. There are drug-drug interactions that cause Q-T prolongation (a kind of heart arrythmia) that is bad enough in some people that it can kill them. This only happens with Seldane, not Allegra.