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Posts Tagged ‘skin rash’

Deferasirox, Desmopressin, Diazepam

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Generic Name
Deferasirox (deh-fur-ASS-sih-rox)
Brand Name Exjade
Type of Drug
Iron chelating agent. Prescribed For
Chronic iron overload. General Information
Deferasirox binds with iron in stored in the liver. It can also bind small amounts of zinc and copper but the importance of these effects are not known. Almost 3/4 of every dose is absorbed into the bloodstream. Most of the drug is broken down in the liver and passes out of the body in the feces. Women clear this drug from their bodies 17.5% slower than men, but this has not affected how it is used or the doses given.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take deferasirox if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients. Most reactions occur within the first month of treatment.
People with liver disease should have monthly blood tests while taking deferasirox.
Kidney failure has developed in people taking deferasirox with fatal results in some cases. People with or those who are at risk of kidney failure should have routine kidney monitoring while taking this medication. People who are at risk for kidney failure in-ciudes seniors, those with kidney disease, and people taking medicines that affect kidney function. Dose adjustment may be needed.
Deferasirox has been associated with potentially severe reduced white-blood-cell and platelet counts, usually in people with preexisting blood disorders.
Rarely, deferasirox has caused hearing loss and eye problems. You should have a full hearing and eye exam before starting on this drug and once a year thereafter.
Skin rash can occur with this medicine. If it is severe, the drug may have to be temporarily stopped. It may be restarted at a lower dosage.
Possible Side Effects
♦    Most common: fever, headache, abdominal pain, cough, sore throat, nasal irritation, diarrhea, flu symptoms, nausea, and vomiting.
✓    Common: respiratory infections, bronchitis, runny nose, rash, upper abdominal pain, joint pain, back pain, tonsillitis, and ear infection.
✓    Less common: itching.
✓    Rare: stomach pain, swelling in the arms or legs, sleep disorder, skin color changes, dizziness, anxiety, gallstones, fatigue, early cataract and hearing loss, some visual haziness, and other eye disorders. Contact your doctor if you experience anything unusual.
Drug Interactions
•    Do not mix antacids containing aluminum with deferasirox. They can prevent it from being absorbed.
Food Interactions
This drug should be taken at the same time every day on an empAq stomach, 30 minutes before eating.
Ustlak 13bSe
Adult and Child (age 2 and over): 9-13.6 mg per lb. of body weight once a day. Dose adjustments will be made according to your response. See “Special Information” for a specific instructions on how to take these tablets.
Overdosage
Large doses of 2-3 times the prescribed amount taken for several weeks with no adverse effects have occurred. Overdose symptoms include hepatitis (mild fever, muscle or joint aches, nausea, vomiting, appetite loss, slight abdominal pain, diarrhea, and fatigue) and some drug side effects. Take the victim to a hospital emergency room for treatment because the heart may be affected. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Call your doctor at once if you develop a severe skin rash.
You must have regular vision and hearing tests while taking deferasirox.
Deferasirox tablets should not be chewed or swallowed whole. They must first be mixed completely in 1/2-1 glass of water, orange juice, or apple juice. The tablet will not dissolve but tablet particles will become suspended in the liquid. Drink the resulting sus-Pension immediately. If there is anything left in the glass after drinking the suspension, add a small amount of liquid, mix it with the remaining tablet particles and drink it.
This drug can cause dizziness. Be cautious while driving, operating machinery, or doing anything that requires intense concentration.
If you forget a dose, take it as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for the next dose, skip the one you forgot and continue with your regular schedule. Do not take a double dose.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: There are no studies of ranolazine in pregnant women or of its effect on the developing fetus. Pregnant women should take this drug only if its potential benefits outweigh the risks.
This drug may pass into breast milk. Nursing mothers should consider using infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors may experience more drug side effects than younger adults due to greater chances of reduced kidney, liver, and heart function; other diseases; or drug side effects.

Generic Name
Desmopressin (dez-moe-PRES-in)
Brand Names
DDAVP Minirin
Type of Drug
Pituitary hormone replacement.
Stimate
Prescribed For
Nighttime bed-wetting and diabetes insipidus (central or cranial diabetes); also used to control bleeding in certain forms of hemophilia A and von Willebrand’s disease.
General Information
Desmopressin acetate is a synthetic version of antidiuretic hormone (ADH). When ADH is lacking, the body has difficulty retaining fluid. People lacking ADH experience excessive thirst, increased urination, and dehydration; desmopressin controls these symptoms. When used for nighttime bed-wetting, desmopressin should be used in conjunction with behavioral or other non-drug therapies.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take desmopressin if you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients.
People, especially children and seniors and people with cystic fibrosis and electrolyte imbalances, should only drink enough fluid to satisfy their thirst while taking desmopressin because of the risk of water intoxication, which can result in seizures that could lead to coma. People with coronary artery disease, heart disease, or high blood pressure should use this drug with caution.
Heart attacks and St&D’KeS after treatment with desmopressin MV~bEbn reported in people at risk for them, but there is no definite link to desmopressin use.
People using desmopressin should have their urine checked regularly by their doctor. Your doctor should also check for nasal swelling, congestion, and scarring.
Drug Interactions
experience in blood pressure, loss of sodium, symptoms include coma, confusion, ng headache, decreased urination, rapid
zures), edema, stomach or abdominal dness or flushing of the skin, passing ain, and stuffy or runny nose. Contact perience any side effect not listed above.
Possible Side Effects
V Rare: slight increase
intoxication (
drowsiness, continuin
gain, and seizures)
nausea, rednes
vulvar pain
doctor if you
•    Desmopressin may increase the effects of other drugs that raise blood pressure. This only happens with large dosages.
•    Chlorpropamide and carbamazepine may increase the effects of desmopressin.
Food Interactions None known.
Usual Dose
Nasal Solution—Nighttime Bed-Wetting
Adult and Child (age 6 and over): 20 mcg (0.2 mL) at bedtime. Child (under age 6): not recommended.
Nasal Solution—Diabetes Insipidus
Adult: 0.1-0.4 mL a day in 1-3 doses.
Child (age 3 months-12 years): 0.05-0.3 mL a day in 1-2 doses.
Tablets—Nighttime Bed-wetting
Adult and Child (age 6 and over): Begin with 0.2 mg at bedtime, adjusting to individual need up to 0.6 mg.
Child (under age 6): not recommended.
Tablets—Diabetes Insipidus
Adult: Begin with 0.05 mg twice a day. Daily dosage should be increased according to individual need, up to 1.2 mg a day divided into 2-3 doses.
Child (age 4 aid over): Begin with 0.05 mg and adjust according to individual need.
Child (under age 4): not recommended.
Overdosage
Symptoms include headache, difficulty breathing, abdominal cramps, nausea, and facial flushing. Call your doctor or a hospi-tal emergency room if you suspect an overdose. Because there is no known antidote to desmopressin, your dosage may be temporarily reduced until overdose symptoms subside. If you seek treatment, ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.
Special Information
Call your doctor if you develop headache, breathing difficulties, heartburn, nausea, abdominal or stomach cramps, or vulvar pain.
The Stimate Nasal Solution spray pump and Minirin spray must be primed before its first use. To prime the pump, press down 4 times. Stimate delivers 25 doses per bottle. Throw away the bottle after 25 doses have been used, because anything remaining after the 25th dose is likely to deliver less drug than is needed.
If you forget a dose of desmopressin, take it as soon as you remember. If you don’t remember until your next dose, skip the forgotten dose and continue with your regular schedule. Do not take a double dose.
Special Populations
Pregnancy/Breast-feeding: The safety of using desmopressin during pregnancy is not known, though it has been used to treat diabetes insipidus in pregnant women without apparent harm to the fetus. When this drug is considered crucial by your doctor, its potential benefits must be carefully weighed against its risks.
Desmopressin may pass into breast milk. Nursing mothers who must use this drug should use infant formula.
Seniors: Seniors should avoid drinking too much fluid while taking desmopressin.

Generic Name
Diazepam (dye-AZ-uh-pam) rVg_l
Brand Names
Diastat    Valium
Diazepam Intensol    Valrelease
The information in this profile also applies to the following drugs:
Lorazepam &
Ativan    Lorazepam Intensol
Oxazepam M
Type of Drug  Benzodiazepine sedative.
Prescribed For
Anxiety, tension, fatigue, agitation (particularly due to alcohol withdrawal), muscle spasm, and seizures; also prescribed for irritable bowel syndrome and panic attacks.
General Information
Diazepam and other benzodiazepines directly affect the brain. They can relax you and make you more tranquil or sleepy, or they can slow nervous system transmissions in such a way as to act as an anticonvulsant.
Cautions and Warnings
Do not take diazepam if you know you are allergic or sensitive to any of its ingredients or to another benzodiazepine drug, including clonazepam.
Diazepam can aggravate narrow-angle glaucoma, but you may take it if you have open-angle glaucoma and are receiving therapy for it.
Other conditions in which diazepam should be avoided are severe depression, severe lung disease, steep apnea (intermittent cessation of breathing during sleep), liver disease, drunkenness, and kidney disease. In all of these conditions, the depressive effects of diazepam may be enhanced or could be detrimental to your overall condition.
Diazepam should not be taken by psychotic patients. It is not effective for them and can trigger unusual excitement, stimulation, and rage.
Diazepam is not intended for more \han 3-4 months of continuous use. Your comikkni) should be reassessed before continuing YOU( MS-16cation beyond that time.
Diazepam may be addictive. It should be used with caution in people with a history of drug dependence.
Drug withdrawal may develop if you stop taking it after only 4 weeks of regular use but is more likely after longer use. It may start with anxiety and progress to tingling in the hands or feet, sensi-tivity to bright light, sleep disturbances, cramps, tremors, muscle tension or twitching, poor concentration, flu-like symptoms, fatigue, appetite loss, sweating, and changes in mental state. Your dosage should always be reduced gradually to prevent drug withdrawal symptoms.
Possible Side Effects
Y Most common: mild drowsiness during the first few days of therapy. Weakness and confusion may occur, especially in seniors and in those who are sickly. If these effects persist, contact your doctor.
♦ Less common: depression, lethargy, disorientation, headache, inactivity, slurred speech, stupor, dizziness, tremors, constipation, dry mouth, nausea, inability to control urination, sexual difficulties, irregular menstrual cycle, changes in heart rhythm, low blood pressure, fluid retention, blurred or double vision, itching, rash, hiccups, nervousness, hysteria, psychosis, inability to fall asleep, and occasional liver dysfunction. If you have any of these symptoms, stop taking the drug and contact your doctor at once.
•    Rare: Rare side effects can affect your heart, stomach and intestines, urinary tract, blood, muscles, and joints. Contact your doctor if you experience any side effect not listed above.
Drug Interactions
•    Diazepam is a central-nervous-system depressant. Avoid alcohol, other sedatives, narcotics, barbiturates, monoamine oxidase inhibitor antidepressants, antihistamines, and antidepressants. Taking diazepam with these drugs may lead to excessive depression, drowsiness, or difficulty breathing.
•    Smoking may reduce diazepam’s effectiveness by increasing the rate at which it is broken down by the body.
•    Effects of diazepam may be prolonged when taken with cimeti(1(m,, Contraceptive drugs, disulfiram, fluoxetine, isoniazid, ketoconazole, rifampin, metoprolol, probenecid, propoxyphene, propranolol, and valproic acid.
•    Theophylline may reduce the sedative effects of diazepam.
•    If you take antacids, separate them from your diazepam dose by at least 1 hour to prevent them from interfering with the passage of diazepam into the bloodstream.
•    Diazepam may increase blood levels of digoxin and the chances for digoxin toxicity.
•    Levodopa + carbidopa’s effects may be decreased if it is taken with diazepam.
Combining diazepam and phenytoin may increase phenytoin blood concentrations and the risk of phenytoin toxicity.
Food Interactions
Diazepam is best taken on an empty stomach, but it may be taken with food if it upsets your stomach.
Usual Dose
Solution or Tablets
Adult’. 2-40 mg a day. Dosage must be adjusted to individual response for maximum effect. In seniors, less of the drug is usually required to control tension and anxiety.
Child (6 months and over): 1-2.5 mg 3 or 4 times a day; more may be needed to control anxiety and tension.
Child (under 6 months): not recommended.
Rectal Gel
Adult and Child (age 12 and over): 0.09 mg per lb. of body weight. Approximate dosage: 5 mg if 31-60 lbs., 10 mg if 61 -110 lbs., 15 mg if 111-165 lbs., or 20 mg if 166-244 lbs.
Child (age 6-11): 0.14 mg per lb. of body weight. Approximate dosage: 5 mg if 22-40 lbs., 10 mg if 41-82 lbs., 15 mg if 83-121 lbs., or 20 mg if 122-163 lbs.
Child (age 2-5): 0.23 mg per lb. of body weight. Approximate dosage: 5 mg if 13-24 lbs., 10 mg if 25-49 lbs., 15 mg if 50-73 lbs., or 20 mg if 74-97 lbs.
An extra 2.5 mg of the rectal gel may be given if a more precise dosage is needed or as a partial replacement for people who do not retain the full dosage after it is first inserted rectally.
Overdosage
SYMPUns of overdose include confusion, sleepiness, poor coordination, lack of response to pain, loss of reflexes, shallow breathing, low blood pressure, and coma. The victim should be taken to a hospital emergency room. ALWAYS bring the prescription bottle or container.

Allergens and Irritants at Work

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

Allergens and irritants at work
Some workplaces have very high concentrations of allergens in the air, especially if proper safety procedures are not being followed. Occupational allergies can begin with symptoms in the nose, such as sneezing, blockage or constant streaming (allergic rhinitis). You may also suffer with itchy or watery eyes (conjunctivitis), a cough, sweating and a feverish feeling. Alternatively, direct contact with the allergen can produce a skin rash (dermatitis) or itchiness and swelling (contact urticaria/nettle rash and angioedema).
If you work somewhere with an allergy risk (see pp. 133-4), be vigilant for such symptoms and see your doctor immediately. These symptoms can be the forerunners of occupational asthma, which is a serious and potentially irreversible problem. Some allergens, such as latex, can even produce anaphylactic shock (a life-threatening allergic collapse).
Skin-prick tests (see p. 91) can show if you have an allergy to a substance encountered at work.
Acting promptly gives you the best possible chance of recovery and is vital if you have occupational asthma. Only if exposure to the allergen stops promptly do you have a good chance of shaking off the asthma. See your doctor as soon as possible and ask for a referral to a chest specialist, so that a definite diagnosis can be made. This is essential if you are going to make a claim for compensation.
Far too many people with occupational asthma are just sent off with an inhaler when they first see their doctor. By delaying the moment when work is identified as the source of the problem, and the exposure to the allergen is stopped, drug treatment can turn occupational asthma into a disabling lifelong problem. Although drugs can be helpful in speeding your recovery once exposure to the allergen
Latex allergy
Sensitisation to latex usually occurs at work (see pp. 133-4), or as a result of having many surgical operations. But latex allergy sometimes occurs in allergy-prone people even though they don’t work in a high-risk job and haven’t had many operations. Some doctors think that if a child with severe allergies needs surgery, this should be done in latex-free conditions, even though the child has no allergy to latex, because of the risk that the operation will sensitise.
Latex can cause either contact dermatitis (see p. 55) or a Type I allergy, whose symptoms can include urticaria, asthma and anaphylaxis. Latex allergy often goes undiagnosed. Once sensitised, you may react to balloons, elastic bands, condoms and household gloves. Latex in the air,
due to powdered latex gloves being used, can be a hazard for someone who is highly sensitive, as can latex traces in food (see box on p. 175). Medical treatment may be problematic (see p. 98 and box on p. 249). Cross-reactions to certain foods can occur (see p. 15 and p. 51).
For those avoiding latex, there are non-latex gloves (see p. 57), and non-latex condoms. Immunotherapy (see pp. 164-9) may be useful in severe cases: it can reduce sensitivity and eliminate cross-reactions to foods.
Other hazards
This article (pp. 132-5) deals mainly with allergens at work, that is, substances which provoke classical allergies (Type I reactions). In addition, there are skin irritants and antigens in workplaces which can provoke contact dermatitis (see p. 56) or contact urticaria (see p.50).
Some of the most dangerous workplace substances are those that bring on asthma but are not allergens. These are usually called low-molecular-weight asthmagens. The most notorious of these are platinum salts, isocyanates (used in cement, in the manufacture of foam, plastics and varnishes, and for spray-painting cars, aeroplanes and boats), colophony (used as a solder in electronics), glutaraldehyde (used in hospitals for sterilisation procedures), and persulphate (used in hairdressing). Powerful respiratory equipment, supplying air from outside the area (see p. 135) is needed if you work with some of these substances, e.g. isocyanates for spray-painting cars.
has ended, they should not be seen as a way of allowing you to go on working with the offending allergen or asthmagen.
If it seems plausible that your allergies or your asthma are related to your work, your doctor should be able to give you a sickness certificate, so that you can have some time away from the workplace, to see if you recover. The medical service at your workplace may be better at diagnosing occupational asthma than your own doctor, but be cautious. In some workplaces they do operate as they should and offer genuinely confidential treatment. But there have also been cases of information being passed to the management, and workers with the early signs of occupational allergies and/or asthma being dismissed on a pretext, or made redundant, to avoid a possible compensation claim. Most occupational health services claim to be independent, but they actually have to earn the trust of the workforce. Before you make any move, ask your colleagues for their views, especially those who have worked there for many years.
Choosing a job
If you have any tendency to allergies, or come from an allergy-prone family, you should be very choosy about where you work. Try to avoid workplaces where there is heavy exposure to allergens, especially airborne allergens which can provoke asthma:
• Bakeries and flour mills, where the allergens concerned may be wheat proteins in the flour, or enzymes added to the flour mix. These allergies can take years to begin.
• Other food-processing works, particularly those dealing with tea, soyabeans, other beans (e.g. gram flour), shellfish and fish (especially if automated gutting machines are used without adequate ventilation). Food preparation and sandwich-making can cause contact urticaria, if there is prolonged contact with a particular foodstuff (e.g. tomatoes).
• Farms, docks and cotton mills – or any other workplace generating dust from plant products. On farms, it is the dust from grain and hay that is often responsible, although mould spores (see p. 121) can also be the culprit. Allergies to mites (found in hay, grain and flour) sometimes occur and eczema is the most common symptom – often called simply ‘grain itch’.
• Saw mills and joineries, because of the wood dust, especially that from hardwoods and from red cedar (Thuja plicata).
• Paper recycling plants, if there is a lot of paper dust in the air.
• Detergent and pharmaceutical factories handling enzymes – these are added to ‘biological’ washing powders and are potential allergens. The risks are less these days, as the enzymes are in granule form rather than powder.
• Factories processing natural products such as psyllium or ispaghula, which are used as laxatives. Anyone who has been sensitised should avoid taking medicines containing the offending substance in the future, because these can sometimes provoke a dangerous anaphylactic reaction.
• Hospitals, clinics and dental surgeries, mainly due to latex rubber, used in gloves and equipment. Although nursing staff and surgeons are most susceptible, other staff including hospital administrative workers can occasionally be affected. Fears about the spread of the HIV virus has led to a huge increase in the use of latex gloves in medicine and dentistry, and a consequent epidemic of latex allergy. The main problem is with powdered latex gloves, which release 15,000 times as much allergen into the air as unpowdered gloves. Unpowdered, low-allergen gloves greatly reduce the risk of latex allergy developing, and non-latex gloves are even better. There are moves to ban the import of powdered latex gloves into Britain. They are already being phased out in hospitals and other medical facilities, but progress is slow in some areas.
• Other workplaces where powdered latex gloves are used, including
Making the workplace safe for everyone
Note that these choices about employment are for the individual employees to make for their own protection - an employer cannot refuse to take anyone on because they have allergies or come from an atopic (allergy-prone) family.
The reasoning behind this is that the workplace should be safe for everyone, as far as possible. As many as one in three of the population may be susceptible to allergies, and it is clearly wrong to bar all such people from major industries. Current thinking, in most countries, is that the focus should be on getting allergens and asthmagens out of the air, not keeping the more vulnerable workers out of the workplace.
hairdressers, dental surgeries, pathology laboratories and police stations. Construction workers wearing rubber gloves are also at risk. Someone who has been sensitised by powdered latex gloves may then react to other items (see box on p.132). Those severely affected can have great problems in daily life and with medical treatment, so anyone with a strong tendency to allergy should strenuously avoid becoming sensitised.
• Factories making or using rubber items may also expose workers to the risk of latex allergy. Anything made by the ‘dipping method’ (e.g. balloons, condoms, elastic bands and gloves) is highly allergenic. Moulded rubber items, such as tyres, are much less of a problem. Neoprene and other synthetic rubber items are not allergenic.
• Chiropody and podiatry clinics, where there is a risk of allergic reactions to the fungus that causes athlete’s foot. It is inhaled on skin flakes from the patients’ feet.
• Laboratories and other workplaces where animals are kept. In the case of mice, rats and other rodents, the allergen is found in the animals’ urine, and becomes airborne as the urine dries. Insects and spiders (e.g, those reared for biological pest control), are also allergenic due to small airborne particles from their bodies. Those working closely with bees (either honeybees or bumblebees, now reared for pollinating glasshouse crops) are liable to be stung frequently, and this can lead to sting allergy (see pp. 60-61).
• Hairdressing salons, where many different items are used that are potentially allergenic, including latex gloves (see above), permanent-wave solutions and henna. The risks of contact dermatitis are also high (see p. 55).
• Greenhouses, where the enclosed conditions can lead to high levels of allergens from plants, moulds and insect pests. There may also be exposure to pesticide sprays or their residues, which can greatly aggravate any underlying tendency to allergies.
If you have ever suffered from atopic eczema, work situations that can bring on contact dermatitis should also be avoided (see p. 55).
Taking a risky job
If circumstances force you to take a job with an allergy risk, observe all the safety procedures that are in place, and where you have the option of turning on extractor fans, wearing protective gear, or simply opening doors and windows, always do so. If the safety procedures seem inadequate, talk to your trade union Safety Representative, or the local Health and Safety Executive which can run a check on safety procedures in your workplace. This will be presented to the employer as a routine check, so they need never know that a member of the workforce has contacted the HSE.
Whatever you do, if you are in a risky job, don’t smoke. At a salmon processing plant in Scotland, 40% of the smokers developed allergies (resulting in asthma) to the fish allergens in the spray from the fish-gutting machine. Non-smokers - who formed the overwhelming majority of the workers - were not affected at all. In United States cotton mills, smokers are affected by levels of cotton dust in the air that are legally defined as ’safe’, while nonsmokers remain unaffected.
Passive smoking at work is also an important issue. A recent US study showed that non-smokers were more likely to develop asthma if they worked alongside a smoker. Your employer has a duty to provide you with clean air. This includes ensuring that other employees do not impose their cigarette smoke on you.
Respiratory equipment
Where respiratory equipment is needed, your employer must provide this, and it must be the right equipment for the job. It should be inspected, tested, cleaned and repaired after each use, and filters should be replaced regularly. All this is your employer’s responsibility, but check that it is being done, and always look the mask over before you put it on.
Two different types of respiratory equipment are currently in use:
• Those that give you a supply of air from outside the work area, either from a compressed-air cylinder, or via an air-hose (airline) supplied with fresh air. In Britain these are called breathing apparatus.
• Those that use the surrounding air but filter it to remove allergens and asthmagens. In Britain these are called respirators. (In some countries this term describes any kind of respiratory equipment.) Ordinary respirators may pose problems for some asthmatics because they cannot breathe in strongly enough to draw sufficient air through the filter. Powered respirators can be the answer: they have a battery-powered unit to help with pulling in the air.
There are government regulations concerning the type of equipment required for each type of allergen and asthmagen. Large companies generally follow these regulations, but small businesses, such as local sawmills, joineries and car-repainting workshops, may not even know about them.
Any respiratory equipment that has a face mask must form a tight seal with your face. Facial hair will prevent this, and so will stubble, so shave carefully. Faces vary enormously in shape, and if your face mask does not fit, ask for a different type of mask or a different type of respiratory equipment. Persist until you get one that’s right for you.
Carry out a ‘fit check’ each and every time you wear the mask. For example, with respirators, you can check the fit by covering the air intake completely with your hand and breathing in sharply: if the mask fits properly, it should collapse onto your face, and remain stuck to your face for several seconds. Look at the manufacturer’s instruction booklet as there may be a specific fit check recommended for the equipment you are using.
If there is any difficulty in breathing through the respiratory equipment, the replaceable filter cartridge or the equipment itself should be replaced. You should also take action immediately if you can smell the substance being handled – but never rely on this as a danger sign, because an extremely small amount, way beyond the detection capacity of the human nose, may be very damaging indeed to your health.
Keep your mask on throughout the work period. If you find this impossible, talk to your employer or
line manager about getting a different kind of respiratory equipment – a powered device, for example, that assists the inflow of air.
No form of respiratory equipment provides complete protection against allergens and asthmagens: there is always the chance of some small amount getting through. This is why respiratory equipment should not be used by those who have already developed occupational asthma but want to stay in their job.
Those who really cannot change jobs (e.g, farmers) are sometimes able to use a powered respirator helmet, which allows them to go on working despite the allergen. But this is not an ideal solution from a purely health point of view. Farmers can also improve matters, where moulds are the source of allergens, by keeping all harvested crops dry and thoroughly ventilated.
A lasting problem
As long as you catch the problem early, and are no longer anywhere near the allergen, your symptoms should disappear completely, but remember that you may still be highly sensitive to the allergen, even years afterwards. For a year or two at least, avoid contact with it again, even in tiny amounts. If someone else in your family works at the same place, they may bring home traces of the allergen on their clothes and hair: ask them to leave their workclothes outside the house and shower on arriving home.
With occupational allergies to airborne food particles, it is possible that the affected individual will later react to the same food when eaten. Experiment very cautiously, especially if the allergen is fish or shellfish.
The allergy may persist long after the job has ended. In one case, doctors found that a woman who had developed ‘baker’s asthma’, while working briefly in a bakery when young, was still allergic to the enzyme additive in bread 20 years later. She suffered an asthma attack whenever she ate bread.