(This post was last modified: 01-12-2017, 12:07 AM by churchilllafemme.)
My wife and I were recently making an online reservation at a bed & breakfast place for a brief trip we're going to take this summer, and I noticed that the B&B's web site said that they are a "fragrance-free zone" and that they request that guests not wear any aftershaves, colognes, or perfumes while staying there. For some reason that reminded me of a patient I had in my allergy medical practice years ago who claimed that she was allergic to her husband. She said that even being in the same room with him for longer than a few minutes caused her to have coughing and shortness of breath, episodes that had been worsening for a couple years. After eliminating the possibility of reactions to his personal care items such as aftershaves and to his clothing, and after making sure he did not have any apparent transmissible infectious diseases, I had him exercise vigorously by walking up and down the stairs outside my office. Then I harvested some of his sweat by scraping it gently into a test tube and used it to concoct a skin test solution. Lo and behold, upon skin test challenges with the solution, his wife quickly developed itchy redness and swelling at the test sites. (Fortunately she had no respiratory symptoms.) Subsequently I was able to make serial dilutions of the test solution, which were then used for subcutaneous injections over a period of 2 months to desensitize her to whatever it was in his perspiration that was causing her reactions.
After that she was able not only to be in the same room with him indefinitely, but also to sleep in the same bed with him again. But that's another story....
After that she was able not only to be in the same room with him indefinitely, but also to sleep in the same bed with him again. But that's another story....
John