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A-Z Principal Drugs (amorolfine - antibiotics )

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

A-Z Principal Drugs (amorolfine - antibiotics )

amorolfine An antimycotic used in the treatment of fungal infections of the nails. It is applied to the nails as a lacquer (5%), but prolonged treatment at weekly
intervals for some months is required until the nails are regenerated. Also cream 5% for skin infections. (1-oceryl).
amoxapine A tricyclic antidepressant with the actions, uses and side-effects of imipramine, but giving a more rapid initial response.
Dose: 10(1-250 mg daily, with half dose [or elderly patients. The side-effects of drowsiness may be reduced by giving a single daily dose at night. (Asendis). See page 128 and Table 11.
annoxycillin An orally active penicillin very similar to ampicillin, but absorption is less influenced by food. It is active against a wide range of organisms and is used in the treatment of respiratory, urinary and soft-tissue infections, and also in typhoid fever. Dose: 750 mg-1.5g daily. In severe infections doses up to 4 g daily by i.v. infusion. In simple, acute, urinary infections 2 oral doses of 3 g with 12 hours between doses.
In the prophylaxis of bacterial endocarditis I or 2 (loses of 3 g. The activity against penicillinase-producing organisms is increased by the combined use of clavulanic acid. (Amoxil).
amphetamine sulphate A powerful central nervous system stimulant. It is now rarely prescribed because of the high risk of dependence. See dexamphetamine.
amphotericin An antifungal antibiotic, effective in systemic as well as superficial infections.
Dose: for systemic use, 250 pgikg daily in 5% glucose solution by i.v. infusion, and increased if tolerated to a maximum of I mg/kg daily. Side-effects, often severe, are numerous and include vomiting, fever, cardio- and nephrotoxicity. (Abelcet and Ambisone are modified products with reduced toxicity.) For intestinal candidiasis, doses of 400-800 mg daily are given orally. For superficial infections 31% ointment is applied locally. (AmBisonc; Fungicillin).
ampicillin An acid-stable and orally active penicillin. It is inactivated by penicillinaseproducing organisms and most staphylococci are now resistant to ampicillin. It is used in chronic bronchitis, ear infections, and infections of the biliary and urinary tracts.
Dose: 1-2 g orally or by i.m. injection; in severe infections, up to 4 g daily by i.v.
infusion. In urinary infections, doses of 1.5 g daily are given, but in gonorrhoea, a single dose of 2 g with I g of probenecid is often effective. Skin reactions are relatively common but the urticarial type is indicative of penicillin allergy, and requires a change of treatment. A macro-papular rash is frequent with patients with infective mono-nucleosis and treatment with ampicillin should be discontinued. (Anifipen; Peribritin).
arnpiclox A mixed product containing .ampicillin 250 mg and cloxacillin 250 mg.
amsacrine A synthetic cytotoxic agent similar in action to doxorubicin but less cardiotoxic.
Dose: in refractory myeloid leukaemia 90 niginidaily for 5 days by i.v. infusion. Subsequent doses at intervals of 2-4 weeks according to response. Strict control is
essential as hypokalaemia with fatal arrhythmia has occurred. Side-effects include nausea, stomatitis, alopecia, myelosuppression and epileptiform seizures. (Am,idinc). Svc page 112 and Table 8.
amylobarbitone A barbiturate of medium intensity.
Dose: 100-200 mg. Sodium derivative is more rapid in action, but the effect less prolonged; it has been given i.v. for the control of convulsions and in epilepsy. (Amytal). See page 152.
anabolic steroids Compounds related to testosterone with similar protein- building properties but reduced virilizing effects. They have been used to stimulate protein synthesis after major surgery and in
wasting disease, but the response is often disappointing. They are sometimes used to relieve the itching of chronic biliary obstruction, but may exacerbate the associated jaundice. Some anabolic steroids have been used in high doses in aplastic
anaemia, and as palliatives in breast cancer. Side-effects are oedema and jaundice, and hepatic impairment is a contraindication. They should not be given to children as they may cause premature closing of the epiphyses. See nandrolone; stanozolol.
anastrozole An inhibitor of aroniata,-ic, the enzyme involved in the conversion of androgens to oestrogens by the adrenal gland. Used in post-menopausal oestrogen-dependent breast cancer as it reduces the plasma level of oestrogens.

Dose: J mg as a single daily (lose. Supplementary steroid therapy is unnecessary. Side-effects are hot flushes, vaginal dryness and hair thinning. (Arimidex). See
page 122 and Table 8.
aneurine hydrochloride See thiamine.
angiotensin converting enzyme
inhibitors (ACE) I )rugs which inhibit the conversion of angiotensin I (secreted by the kidney) to angiotensin 11 (a powerful hypertensive) and thus, indirectly, lower blood pressure. ACI: ‘inhibitors are used in the treatment of hypertension, especially in severe conditions that have not responded to other therapy, and also in congestive heart failure. Initial therapy requires care, as a marked first-dose fall in blood pressure may occur. The first dose is best given at night, with the patient in bed, and if possible any diuretic treatment should have beets    for a few days. Renal function should be monitored during ACE inhibitor therapy, as these drugs may cause a progressive and sometimes severe renal impairment. See page 148 and Table 21.
anistreplase A complex of streptokinase with human plasminogen, used to restore blood flow after myocardial infarction. It binds with the fibrin of blood clots, and is slowly metabolized to release the active fibrinolytic agent plasmin. It is given by i.v. infusion as a single dose of 30 units, within 6 hours of infarction up to a total dose of 100 mg over 3 hours. Side-effects include transient hypotension, nausea, flushing and allergic reactions. (Eininase).
antazoline A mild antihistamine, used with the vasoconstrictor naphazoline as a nasal spray to reduce local congestion in sinusitis and rhinitis, and as eye drops in allergic conjunctivitis. (Otrivine).
action are represented by aurcomycin,    15 chloramphenicol, the tetracyclines, and the cephalosporins. The aniinoglycoside antibiotics represented by gentamicin are used mainly in infections due to Gram-negative organisms, but are more toxic than the penicillins or related drugs. Rifampicin is an antibiotic used mainly in tuberculosis. Broad-spectrum antibiotics should not be given for more than
5-10 days, to prevent disturbance of normal bacterial flora in the gut leading to overgrowth of other organisms such as candida. Certain antibiotics, including neomycin and bacitracin, are too toxic for systemic use but may be useful in the treatment of infected skin conditions.
A few antibiotics such as actinomycin, bleomycin, doxorubicin, mitomycin and aclarubicin have cytotoxic properties. Others, such as griseofulvin, have only an antifungal action.
anticholinergic agents (antimuscarinics) Drugs like atropine that inhibit the activity of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. They are used as smooth muscle relaxants, as inhibitors of gastric secretion, and to reduce the excessive cholinergic activity associated with Parkinson’s disease. By their nature, they have side-effects such as dryness of the mouth and blurred vision, and are contraindicated in glaucoma. See page 160 and Table 26.
anticoagulants Blood clots consisting mainly of fibrin may form in the venous circulation, and heparin and warfarin are used as anti-coagulants in deep vein thrombosis. Heparin is also used prophylactically against postoperative thrombosis and during renal dialysis, and in low doses to reduce the risks of pulmonary
embolism.
antibiotics Antibacterial substances which occur as by-products of the growth of certain moulds. The term now includes sonic synthetic derivatives. The first to be discovered was penicillin, but some penicillin derivatives (amoxycillin, ampicillin and pivampicillin) have a wider range of activity; others (cloxacillin and flucloxacillin) are effective against resistant staphylococci. Azlocillin, carfecillin, piperacillin and ticarcillin are more effective against Pseudomortas aeruginosa. Antibiotics with a more extensive range of
anticonvulsants Also known as anti-epileptics, these are used to control the convulsions of epilepsy. The main types of convulsions or seizures are grand mat and petit mat (absence seizures) but atypical and myoclonic seizures may also occur. Some drugs are effective in most types of seizure, others are more selective in action, but in all cases dosage must be adjusted to need and response. Any change of treatment requires care with overlapping doses to avoid loss of control. Paradoxically, young children may require relatively high doses. See page 136 and Table 15.

Elimination Diet against Allergy

Monday, May 25th, 2009

Elimination diet
An elimination diet is a method of diagnosing idiopathic food intolerance (see p. 74) and certain other

forms of food sensitivity where indirect tests, such as skin tests, are unhelpful. The principle of the

elimination diet is very simple. It begins by removing from the body every food that could possibly

cause a reaction, and seeing if this produces a symptom-free state. If it does, the elimination diet

then presents the body with different foods, each in its pure form, to see which ones cause symptoms.
While the principle is simple, the practicalities of the elimination diet can be much more complex, and

it is vital to understand the details fully before you start. There is absolutely no room for

‘cheating’ with this diet – one mouthful of cake is enough to ruin the whole thing. You need forward

planning and a lot of self-discipline, backed up by a good stock of the permitted foods for moments

when hunger overcomes you. Some cooked foods, stored in the freezer in individual portions for quick

defrosting, are a great help.
Doing an elimination diet incorrectly is not just a waste of time. Some people acquire new

sensitivities during the diet, which may make it very much more difficult to do a second elimination

diet. So plan ahead and get it right first time.
The planning stage
First of all, start an accurate symptom diary. This will give you a precise picture of how bad things

are now, before you try any dietary measures. A detailed daily symptom record, covering a period of

about two weeks, can be very useful, whether or not you actually do an elimination diet. It can serve
as a baseline against which to judge the effects of any future treatment.
Before you begin an elimination diet, you must see your doctor and ask if it is safe for you to do the

diet. Read through the next four pages first – the more you know about elimination diets, before

talking to your doctor, the better.
There are some conditions where, although an elimination diet can be very helpful, it should not be

attempted without full medical supervision. Two main causes for concern exist:
•    For people who are undernourished to start with, the elimination diet may be too demanding – it

is difficult to eat enough calories during the first few weeks of the diet, unless an elemental diet is

used as a supplement (see box on p. 196). If you are underweight, or have rheumatoid arthritis or

Crohn’s disease, the possible use of elemental diets is something you should discuss with your doctor.
•    With certain diseases (see list that follows), the testing stage may induce severe symptoms.

Sometimes these can be life-threatening and need immediate medical attention.
Medical supervision during food testing is recommended for anyone with these conditions:
•    Crohn’s disease – testing can bring on a prolonged relapse. Very small amounts of food should

be tested initially, and the quantity slowly increased.
•    Brittle asthma – after a period of avoidance, a culprit food can bring on a severe and possibly

life-threatening asthma attack.
•    Atopic eczema – the risk of reactions is higher if skin tests are positive (see p. 198).
•    Chronic urticaria – occasionally there is an immediate reaction to an offending food. It is

advisable to test foods in very small portions oust a mouthful) at first. If there is no reaction

whatever after four hours, a normal portion can be tested.
Note that an elimination diet is not suitable for anyone with true food allergy (see p. 62). If you

have ever had an immediate reaction to any food, or any symptoms in the lips or mouth, testing foods

can be dangerous. Caution is also necessary if you have ever reacted to a food with violent vomiting

and/or diarrhoea some hours after eating. This could be due to an infection, of course, but such

symptoms can also, very rarely, result from true food allergy (see p. 64). Finally, if you have ever

suffered anaphylaxis from any cause – not just food –the testing phase of an elimination diet might be

risky. Ask your doctor’s advice.
Once you have your doctor’s permission to try the diet, work out how the stages of the diet will fit in

with your life over the weeks or months ahead. Until it is over, eating food made by other people is

virtually out of the question. When eating away from home, you must either take prepared food with you,

or just eat very simple foods – such as permitted fruits or nuts. Think about the practicalities of

carrying food for meals away from home.
Finally, devise the diet you will follow during the exclusion phase (see right), locate shops that sell

the more unusual foods, and stock up on everything required.
You will continue to eat a lot of these foods for the first few weeks of the testing stage, so you may

want to buy extra stocks and refrigerate them for
longer storage, especially if the sources of supply are some distance from your home.
Note that food ingredients in medication could interfere with the results of the elimination diet. For

example, if you are very sensitive to maize (corn), the cornflour that is added to many antihistamines

and other drugs could create much confusion. Food-free medicines are available – talk to your

pharmacist about this initially, then to your doctor if you need a different prescription.
The exclusion phase
During the first part of an elimination diet, you exclude all the foods that you normally eat, plus any

closely related foods. For example, if you normally eat oranges, you should avoid all other citrus

fruits, including lemon, limes and grapefruit, even though you do not normally eat these. If you

normally eat plenty of broccoli, you should omit all its relatives, such as cabbage, kale, spring

greens and cress.
The best way to conduct the exclusion phase is not to follow a set menu, such as the well-known

‘Iamb-and-pears’ diet, but to draw up your own list of permitted foods. This can include foods that you

have never eaten before, and those you eat rarely.
The list should run to at least ten items. One problem with an exclusion phase that consists of only

two foods (as in the ‘Iamb-and-pears’ diet) is that you are bound to eat a huge amount of these foods.

This is asking for trouble if you have a tendency to food intolerance, because you can quite quickly

become sensitive to new foods if eating them in large amounts.
Your list of permitted foods should include:
Some starchy items. These are essential for keeping hunger at bay: try some of the more exotic root

crops, such as sweet potatoes, yams, dasheen and cassava. These are available in large supermarkets and

in small shops catering to Indian, African, Chinese and Caribbean communities. (Cook them as you would

potatoes. In the case of cassava, it must be boiled, not baked.) You can also eat parsnips, turnips,

chestnuts and pumpkin. Tapioca, sago, buckwheat, millet, quinoa and sorghum are other possibilities: a

health-food shop is a good source of some of these. Use rice if it is not normally part of your diet.

Do not include sweetcorn or maize meal, even though you do not normally eat these –corn products are

very widely used in packaged food, and sensitivity to corn is not uncommon.
Several fruits and vegetables that you don’t normally eat. Exotic produce such as mangoes and okra can

help a lot in keeping the diet tasty. Avocados, which are very rich and nutritious, can be included if

you don’t eat them often.
Some protein items. For carnivores, this is the easy part – any meat that you don’t normally eat is

suitable. Consider turkey, rabbit, pigeon or game, for example. (Soak rabbit meat in salt water

overnight to get rid of the strong taste, if you dislike this.) Strict vegetarians have more problems

here, since goat’s milk, sheep’s milk and all birds’ eggs are disallowed – their proteins are much too

similar to those of normal milk and eggs. Soya products such as tofu should definitely be avoided, as

should other pulses initially, because sensitivity to these is a possibility among vegetarians. Quorn,

or mycoprotein, could affect anyone sensitised to yeast, and should not be included. Fortunately the

exclusion phase is fairly brief, so a low intake of protein will not be disastrous. Including some nuts

on your list of permitted foods will help, as these contain protein. If nuts are part of your normal

diet, you may have to resort to rarely eaten kinds such as macadamias, cashews or pistachios.
Elemental diets
An elemental diet is a powder that contains all the nutrients the human body needs but is free from the

substances in food that provoke allergic and intolerance reactions. It is mixed with water to create a

complete substitute for food. Originally designed for space travel, this totally synthetic form of

sustenance is also known as ‘the astronaut’s diet’.
Used alone during the exclusion phase, elemental diets are the basis for the ultimate – and

theoretically foolproof – elimination diet. They sustain you through the exclusion phase, and continue

to provide your basic diet during the testing phase.
For anyone with multiple food sensitivity, using an elemental diet circumvents the problem of finding

ten or more safe foods with which the elimination diet can begin.
Those who are underweight can also benefit from using an elemental diet, simply as a calorie-boosting

supplement during the exclusion phase and testing phase.
Unfortunately, elemental diets taste fairly unpleasant and are quite expensive. You
may need a prescription, so talk to your doctor. Ideally you should get an elemental diet that does not

contain sucrose (sugar).
Some items that make good snacks. Nuts, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, fresh fruit and dried fruit are

all useful for times when you are away from home, or feel hungry between meals. At the outset of the

diet, use only unsulphured dried fruit –available from health-food shops. At a later stage, you can

test ordinary dried fruit (all of which is treated with sulphur preservatives – see box on p. 207).
A cooking oil, preferably one that you have not used much in the past. Use this fairly liberally, to

keep the calorie content of your diet at a reasonable level
Note that this is a very plain diet – you eat the permitted foods and absolutely nothing else. You

cannot use spices, herbs or other flavourings. Salt is allowed, but sugar is out, as are tea, coffee,

alcohol and all soft drinks. You must drink only mineral water and pure juices from permitted fruits.
Don’t use canned or packaged versions of the permitted foods. Buy raw food and cook it yourself. The

idea is to avoid food additives and other contaminants, such as those from the linings of cans.
Throughout this phase, and the next, you must be very careful not to eat too much of any one food.

Never eat any food every day, and stay away from any food that you begin to develop a real passion for

– this is always a bad sign in people with food intolerance. It is better to go a little hungry

(assuming you are not underweight to start with) rather than binge on any of the permitted foods.

Acquiring new sensitivities is all too easy.
Assuming you do have food intolerance, and you have excluded all the foods that affect you, there

should be a complete clearance of symptoms within 7-10 days. The response is usually unmistakable. A

partial or slight response is probably just a coincidence, and should be discounted, except for those

with rheumatoid arthritis (see below).
Be warned that you may feel a great deal worse before you get better. For those who do have idiopathic

food intolerance, the first 5-6 days of the diet can be very unpleasant – usually they suffer the same

symptoms as before the diet, but far more severe.
Some conditions, such as Crohn’s disease and rheumatoid arthritis, may require a longer exclusion

phase, but there is no point in continuing beyond three weeks. Bear in mind that long-term structural

damage to arthritic joints may prevent a complete recovery. A partial but sustained improvement in the

joints, accompanied by a distinct improvement in general health, suggests that food could well be

playing a part in causing the disease, and that it is worth going on to the testing phase.
Symptoms that are only intermittent, such as chronic urticaria or migraine, pose a special problem. You

need to decide, before starting the diet, how long the exclusion phase should continue in order to give

you a clear sign that your state of health is improved. A symptom diary is vital here. If, for example,

your symptom diary shows that you sometimes have a week that is symptom-free but you never get through

two weeks without an attack, then your exclusion phase should continue for two weeks.
You should only go on to the testing phase if you improve during the exclusion phase. If you do not

improve, you have excluded the possibility of food intolerance, and can give up the diet.
The testing phase
This part of the diet, which is sometimes called the reintroduction phase, takes about eight weeks. It

requires careful observation of your symptoms, and constant self-discipline about everything you eat.

You should not stop or delay the testing unless you are ill – it is vitally important to complete it as

quickly as possible.
Foods have to be reintroduced one at a time, with a space between in which symptoms can be observed. It

sounds simple, but this is where errors can easily occur.
During this phase, as well as noting your symptoms daily, you should also record absolutely everything

you eat.
For the first 2-3 weeks you should test foods that are unlikely to cause symptoms. Start by testing

fruits, vegetables and meats that you do not eat very often normally, but which you do like. If they

pass the test, you can use them to vary your diet. This will make life much easier and reduce the risk

of developing new sensitivities.
Next test foods that you do eat reasonably often, but not every day. Leave the most likely culprits –

the foods you eat very regularly, such as wheat and milk products – until you have established a safe

diet that contains at least 25 different foods. This safe and relatively varied diet should be the

backdrop against which you test staple foods.
The testing procedure changes over time, because your sensitivity may decline as the diet progresses.

During the first eight weeks, you should test one food each day, eating a normal-sized portion for

lunch or supper. A reaction to the food might occur quite soon after the meal, or some hours later. Any

symptoms that occur within the following 24 hours should be provisionally attributed to that food.
Unfortunately, bowel symptoms can sometimes take longer to develop – up to 48 hours. This can confuse

things when a new food is being tested every day.
There may also be uncertainty about intermittent conditions such as chronic urticaria. You may not be

absolutely sure that the problem really responded to the exclusion phase. If so, when the symptoms

recur during the testing phase, this may be due to a food, or it may just be coincidence.
Should there be any doubt about which food caused a particular set of symptoms, cut out all the suspect

foods for now, and retest them after a couple of weeks, using a three-day testing procedure (see

below).
When a reaction does occur to a food, stop all testing and go back to the safe diet until you feel

completely better. But don’t wait too long before resuming testing. You need to get through most of the

testing within eight weeks because, for some people, intolerance to the foods begins to fade after

that.
This does not mean that the intolerance has been ‘cured’, unfortunately. A period of eating the food

regularly will soon bring the problem back.
If you are still testing foods after eight weeks, you must change to three-day testing – eat a normal

portion of the food every day for three days, stopping only if you get symptoms. Should you have no

reaction to the food by the end of the fourth day, you can consider it safe. (But leave it out of your

diet for at least another four days.)
There are some special procedures for testing certain foods:
•    When you test wheat, even if it is quite early on, use the three-day test procedure (see

above). Reactions to wheat can be very slow. (If you have rheumatoid arthritis, you should spend a full

five days testing wheat, and eat it at least twice a day.) Don’t use bread to test wheat because this

also contains yeast and other ingredients. Use a pure wheat cereal such as Shredded Wheat – moisten it

with fruit juice if you cannot have milk. Note that some people who react to whole-wheat are sensitive

to the wheat germ, and can tolerate refined wheat, as in white bread and flour. For others only white

flour is a problem – they are usually reacting to additives in the white flour. Careful testing will

sort out these issues.
•    Test milk before cheese and butter. You may react to one but not the others. If you react to

fresh milk, wait a few weeks, then test evaporated milk. Later, you can test goat’s milk and then

sheep’s milk. Some people can tolerate these, but must be very careful not to consume too much of them.
•    You can test yeast using Marmite or yeast-based B-vitamin tablets. Do this before you test

mushrooms, •    At some point, test a canned food. This is to check for reactions to the lining

material used on cans. Choose something that contains no other ingredients or additives, such as

carrots. Test it first in a frozen or fresh form, so that you are sure you don’t have a reaction to the

food itself.
•    Throughout the testing period, continue with cooking all your own food from scratch. At a

fairly late stage in the testing, when you have tested most foods, spend three days eating packaged

food. The idea is to eat a wide range of different food additives all at once. Read the labels

carefully (see p. 172) to check that all the food ingredients are ones which you have already tested

and found safe. You are unlikely to react to these packaged foods, but if you do, you should then

conduct tests with all the individual food additives. You may need some help from a dietitian for this

(see p. 201).
Testing becomes more and more uncertain after 12 weeks. If you
have not completed it by then, reintroduce all the untested foods.
Should your symptoms come back, cut out all those foods again,
then test them individually.
What next?
For anyone who recovers during an elimination diet, and successfully identifies their problem foods, a

period of complete abstinence from those foods follows. After about a year, it is worth testing the

foods again, as the sensitivity may have subsided. (Don’t do this if you have rheumatoid arthritis –

see p. 23.)
If, after a year or two, you find that a food no longer makes you ill, don’t go back to your old ways –

remember that you must only eat the food occasionally. Once every three or four bays is a good rule of

thumb for a food to which you were previously intolerant. You might get away with having it slightly

more often than this, but never go back to eating it daily. If it starts to become your ‘favourite

food’ again – the thing you fancy more often than anything else – watch out.
Good nutrition is an important issue for anyone avoiding certain key foods. If you have cut out all

milk products, for example, you should probably be taking a calcium supplement, unless you eat a lot of

other calcium-rich foods. Ask your doctor to refer you to a dietician or nutritionist if you feel you

need help.
An elimination diet for children with eczema
Before putting your child on any kind of restrictive diet, it is vital that you talk to your doctor.

The risks of malnutrition are far higher for children, and there can be serious long-term consequences,

such as stunted growth or impaired intelligence. You must therefore have medical consent and

supervision for an elimination diet.
For young children with atopic eczema, there is rarely any need for a stringent elimination diet, such

as that described on pp. 194-7. Children are usually sensitised to only one or two commonly eaten

foods.
In the case of recently weaned infants, it is enough to simply cut out individual foods, one at a time.

Avoid each food for two weeks, while observing symptoms carefully.
For older children a simple elimination diet, with an exclusion phase which avoids just the most likely

culprits, works well. The foods that you should exclude at the outset are:
•    any food which has given a positive skin-prick test (see p. 69)
•    any food which you think may have caused digestive symptoms, such as diarrhoea, either now or

in the past
•    eggs, milk and all milk products
•    beef and chicken
•    citrus fruits (oranges, lemons etc.)
•    food additives.
If the child’s skin is no better after a week of this diet, cut out the following foods as well:
•    peanuts and other nuts
•    soya
•    fish
•    wheat and maize (corn)
•    tomatoes
•    lamb.
If there is no response after another week, food is unlikely to be contributing to the eczema.
For the testing phase, use three-day testing, as described on p. 197, if you have fewer than ten foods

to test. Use one-day testing if you have more than ten foods to test.
You should begin by testing a very small amount of the food. Wait ten minutes for any symptoms (not

just skin symptoms – the mouth or stomach may also be affected) then give a little more if nothing has

happened. Build up gradually to testing a normal portion of the food.
A more cautious approach is required for children who give positive skin-prick tests to foods, or have

a history of symptoms in the mouth or digestive tract. They are more likely to suffer severe symptoms

in the lips, mouth and throat – the type of reaction associated with food allergy. Emergency medical

treatment may be needed. You can see if there is any likelihood of a severe immediate reaction to foods

by starting with a test on the face, and then the outer lip (see box on p. 23). If nothing happens, it

is probably safe to go on to the next stage – giving the child a very small amount of the food to eat.

However, you should have medical supervision for Rare reactions
Very occasionally, atopic eczema sufferers on milk-avoidance diets develop a sensitivity reaction to

calcium supplements. There is no scientific explanation for this, but it has been very well documented

in two children. Should you encounter this problem, the answer may be some alternative natural source

of calcium: sardines or other small fish, eaten whole, are one possibility, assuming your child will

eat fish. A dietician can advise on how much is needed per day.
There has also been one well-documented report of a child reacting to mineral water. When the water she

usually drank was changed to another brand, her eczema cleared up. This is very unlikely to be a common

problem.
this procedure in the case of foods that gave positive skin tests. If your child has both severe eczema

and additional symptoms (such as nettle rash, or symptoms in the mouth or digestive tract) it may be

advisable to have medical supervision when testing all foods.
Bear in mind that atopic eczema naturally fluctuates a great deal. To observe the effects of trying out

a food, you need the child’s skin to be in a steady state. That means being absolutely consistent about

applying steroids and moisturisers, avoiding (for the period of testing) any stressful situations that

could provoke a flare-up, not exposing the skin to sudden doses of irritants or airborne allergens, and

keeping scratching under control. Be aware of other factors that could muddy the waters by provoking a

flare-up of eczema – such as teething, or a cold (see p. 44).
If certain foods are identified as provoking eczema symptoms, and you decide to cut the food from your

child’s diet, a nutritional supplement may well be needed. Ask your doctor to refer you to a

nutritionist or dietician.
Other diagnostic diets
These diets are not used by (or even known to) the majority of doctors. While some, such as the

low-nickel diet, have been subjected to rigorous scientific testing and have shown their worth, others

have not been tested scientifically. The evidence in favour of them is purely anecdotal – in other

words, doctors have used these treatments repeatedly and observed good results with some of their

patients. That is not hard science, but it is how innovations in medicine often begin.
There are few risks with any of these diets – the number of foods to be avoided is small, and you are

most unlikely to become malnourished. Your doctor should not object to you trying any of these diets,

however sceptical he or she may be about its possible benefits.
Low-nickel diet
This diet is sometimes of benefit to adults with eczema. There are various pointers which indicate that

the diet may help, as described on pp. 55-6.
Make sure that you have absolutely no contact with any nickel (e.g. in jewellery, jeans studs, watches

or hair clips) throughout this diet, and for at least two weeks before starting it.
Ideally you should also stop treatment with steroids or antihistamines a week or so before starting the

diet. This allows any improvement to be easily observed. Obviously you should get your doctor’s

permission to do this.
The diet could take anything from six weeks to six months to take full effect. Some people have a

complete clearance of their eczema, while for others there is a partial but distinct improvement.
The foods with a high nickel content, which should be avoided as far as possible, are:
•    shellfish
•    green beans and peas
•    beansprouts and lucerne sprouts
•    dry beans and lentils (pulses) of all kinds; soya protein and products containing it (e.g.

vegetarian sausages and burgers)
•    spinach and kale
•    lettuce, leeks
•    wheat bran (avoid bran cereals and other products; replace wholemeal bread with white bread, or

eat it in moderation only – you can get plenty of fibre from fruits and vegetables; do not eat

multi-grain breads at all)
•    oatmeal, millet and buckwheat
•    raspberries, prunes, pineapple, figs
•    chocolate and cocoa
•    tea from drinks dispensers (restrict intake of other tea and coffee, and don’t make them too

strong)
•    peanuts, hazelnuts, almonds and marzipan
•    liquorice
•    sunflower seeds, linseed
•    baking powder, in large amounts
•    vitamin or mineral preparations that contain nickel (check the label carefully), Nickel is also

found in drinking water, and absorbed from certain cooking utensils, so:
•    Do not use items plated with nickel (e.g. tea balls, some tea strainers, egg beaters). The

extremely shiny appearance of nickel makes these easy to recognise.
•    Do not cook acid fruits in stainless steel pans, since the acid leaches some nickel out of the

stainless steel. An enamel cooking pot is safe.
•    Minimise the amount of tinned food that you eat.
•    In the morning, run off the first litre of water from the tap, as this may contain nickel

released from the tap itself.
Several other foods and drinks seem to aggravate the skin of nickel-sensitive people, even though the

foods are not rich in nickel. These foods and drinks should also be avoided:
•    beer, wine
•    herring, mackerel, tuna
•tomatoes, carrots, onions, apples; oranges and other citrus fruits, including their juices.
Low-chromium and low-cobalt diets
Skin sensitivity to chromium or cobalt can, very occasionally, result in a tendency to react to these

same metals when consumed in food or drink (see pp. 56).
Unfortunately, both chromium and cobalt are essential for good nutrition, so avoiding them is fraught

with problems. You would need the help of a really good dietician, or a doctor with a particular

interest in nutritional problems, to guide you through a diet of this kind.
The only measure you can safely take at home is to cut down on excessive consumption of these metals,

for three weeks only, to see if this produces any improvement in your symptoms. If it does, that should

encourage you to seek expert help for a more thorough avoidance diet.
In the case of cobalt sensitivity avoid:
•    all canned and bottled beer.
In the case of chromium sensitivity avoid:
•    beer, wine and cider
•    yeast extract and yeast tablets
•    black pepper
•    calf’s liver
•    wheatgerm and wholemeal bread
•    cheese.
If you also have nickel sensitivity, avoid nickel-rich foods (see p. 199) at the same time.
Low-histamine diet
Histamine in food is mostly produced by bacterial action. The majority of people can break down any

histamine they eat, as long as the amount is not excessive (see box on p. 67).
Temporary susceptibility to histamine may accompany viral hepatitis or other liver conditions.
A permanently impaired ability to detoxify histamine is relatively unusual. When it does occur it can

result in symptoms such as chronic urticaria, migraine or recurrent headaches. A low-histamine diet may

help in these cases. All of the following should be avoided:
Very high histamine content:
•    red wine, champagne
•    tuna, sardines
•    Emmenthal and Camembert cheeses.
High histamine content:
•    beer, white wine
•    anchovies
•    Gouda, Roquefort, Stilton and all other well-matured cheeses
•    salami and other well-matured sausages, Westphalian ham
•    sauerkraut
•    spinach
•    tomato ketchup.
If you improve only partially on this diet, this may indicate that you are on the right track

(histamine is indeed the problem) but that the bacteria in your gut are undermining your efforts with

the additional histamine which they generate. You can investigate this possibility by trying a

low-carbohydrate diet, as described on p. 53.
Low-amine diet
Naturally occurring substances called amines, found in many different foods, can have a drug-like

effect on the blood vessels, making them open up a little and so increasing the blood flow. The effect

is usually small, but some people are more susceptible than others. A low-amine diet is worth trying if

you have chronic urticaria or migraines, and have not improved with other treatments. A low-amine diet

can also be useful in atopic eczema: amines in food are not a basic cause of eczema, but they can

aggravate the rash by increasing blood flow to the skin. To begin with, cut out all foods listed below:
Very high amine content:
•    all cheeses except cottage cheese
•    dark or plain chocolate
•    yeast extract (Marmite etc.), miso, tempeh, tomato paste, tandoori spice mix, stock cubes,

ready-made sauces •    cola drinks, orange juice, tomato juice
•    any dried, pickled or smoked fish
•    sausages, pies and smoked meats, beef liver, chicken skin
•    broad beans, spinach
•    sauerkraut
•    almonds.
High or moderate amine content:
•    milk chocolate
•    soy sauce
•    beer, wine and cider
•    pork, including bacon and ham, salami, chicken liver, offal
•    all fresh or tinned fish, except white fish
•    all nuts except chestnuts and cashews
•    sesame seeds, sunflower seeds
•    avocados, aubergines, mushrooms, tomatoes, broccoli, cauliflower
•    olives and olive oil
•    oranges, lemons and other citrus fruits
•    pineapples, bananas, raspberries, strawberries, pineapples, plums, grapes, dates, figs, kiwi

fruit, passion fruit.
Continue for at least three weeks, and longer if your symptoms are normally intermittent. if you

improve, you can then experiment with reintroducing small portions of foods from the second list, three

or four times a week. Gradually build up to a higher intake, but cut back if your symptoms return.
Organic diet
The objective here is to avoid pesticides, i.e. chemical sprays applied to kill fungi and insect pests.

This may be helpful for people with chemical intolerance (see p. 84).
`Chemical-free’ or ‘unsprayed’ food (crops grown without pesticides) will do just as well as 100%

organic food (which is grown without either pesticides or artificial fertilisers).
The highest intake of pesticides is from fresh fruit and vegetables, so if your budget is tight,

concentrate on buying organic or chemical-free versions of these. If you have a garden, growing some of

your own food will reduce the cost.
You can also reduce the pesticide content of ordinary fruits and vegetables by:
•    Storing them for as long as possible before using them, because the pesticides break down quite

quickly
•    Always peeling them. With difficult-to-peel items such as peaches and tomatoes, pour boiling

water over them and leave them to stand for a few minutes first, as this loosens the skin. Rinse in

cold water, then peel.
•    If peeling is not possible, washing them very well with soap or detergent, then rinsing them

thoroughly
•    Cooking them, as this drives off some of the pesticides; avoid inhaling the steam and ventilate

the kitchen well while doing this.
You should drink mineral water from a reputable source, or use a very high-quality water filter (not a

jug filter).
Additive-free diet
Food additives are occasionally the culprit in chronic urticaria (see p. 53). At the same time as

avoiding additives, people with chronic urticaria should cut out other potential culprits – alcohol,

spices and all aspirin-like drugs (see box on p. 151).
An additive-free diet may also be of value for some people with chemical intolerance (see p. 84).
In the case of children with Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD), also called Hyperkinetic Syndrome, the

role of additive-free diets is a contentious issue (see p. 81).
An additive-free diet is very healthy but quite hard work. It means making all your own food from 100%

fresh, unmodified produce (you cannot have bacon or ham, and even things like cooked chicken and

ready-to-eat salad can contain some additives; so does most restaurant food). Note that wines, beers

and other alcoholic drinks can contain many additives without declaring them on the label. (German

bottled beer is an exception here.) Baked goods sold unwrapped can also contain many additives without

declaring them.
Stop using toothpaste unless it is an additive-free brand. You can buy such toothpaste from a

health-food shop – or use sodium bicarbonate powder instead. Drink mineral water or filtered water (you

need a good-quality filter for this, not a jug filter).
Medicinal drugs can contain colourings and other additives, so you should try to get additive-free

versions. Talk to your pharmacist about this initially.
Assuming the symptoms clear up, testing can begin, but you will probably need medical help to work out

exactly which additives are at fault. It is difficult to organise these tests at home, because most

foods contain such a mixture of additives.
With chronic urticaria, there is the possibility of quite severe reactions on testing, so medical

supervision is desirable. You can undertake cautious testing with small amounts of tap water, spices

and alcohol at home, but make sure you are in a position to get emergency medical help if you need it.

Aspirin or aspirin-like drugs should not be tested at home. Life-threatening reactions are common in

sensitive individuals, and temporary avoidance can heighten your reaction.

Using Anti-Asthmatic Inhalers

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

Using inhalers
The value of using an inhaler rather than taking tablets or syrup is explained on p. 141 for steroids. The same principle applies to all drugs.
The oldest type of inhaler is the ‘puffer’ or aerosol inhaler, properly called a ‘pressurised metered-dose inhaler’ or MDI. It delivers the drug as a fine, moist, spray. In addition, there are now many devices that deliver drugs in dry-powder form.
If you or your child find the aerosol inhalers difficult, you may do better with a dry-powder inhaler. Your doctor should have several different inhalers available for you to try out, to see which one suits you best.
When you are given an inhaler you must be shown how to use it by a doctor or asthma nurse. A great many asthma patients have a ‘poor inhaler technique’, and get too little of the drug as a result. This often leads to their asthma getting out of control. The advice given here for using inhalers is no substitute for proper training, and should only be used to supplement what your doctor or asthma nurse has told you.
When using an aerosol inhaler or MDI, remember to shake the inhaler well or you will not get the right dose. Your in-breath must coincide exactly with pressing the canister down: this is the part that many people find difficult. You must breathe in slowly and deeply, otherwise you do not get much of the drug into your airways.
Many asthmatics stop inhaling the moment the
spray from the aerosol inhaler hits the back of the
throat. The spray contains a propellant, which
makes it very cold, and there is a natural reflex
response to this cold liquid which stops inhalation.
This response may be impossible to control. If so,
you need a dry-powder inhaler (see right), or a
spacer to use with your aerosol inhaler (see p. 162).
Breath-operated aerosol inhalers such as the
Autohaler can be useful for those who find ordinary
aerosol inhalers too hard to use. With these devices, you do not have to push the canister down because your in-breath triggers the release of the drug. Take care not to block the air-intake holes with your hands and don’t stop breathing when you hear the inhaler click. (If there is no click, start again and breathe in more forcefully this time.)
One hazard with aerosol inhalers is that, when almost empty, they produce no drug – just the propellant. Although they still ‘puff’ normally, they are not effective. It may be hard to tell when your inhaler is running low. Ask your doctor or asthma nurse for advice about this.
Many asthmatics find dry-powder inhalers such as the Spinhaler, Rotahaler, Diskhaler, Accuhaler, Clickhaler and Turbohaler are the easiest to use. They have no aerosol device, so none of the problems associated with the coldness of the propellant.
On the other hand, nothing pushes the drug into your mouth and lungs with a dry-powder inhaler: you have to do all the work yourself. This means you have to breathe in quite hard and fast. During a severe asthma attack you may not be able to breathe in hard enough to get a good dose of the drug. Some asthmatics have an aerosol inhaler as well, often combined with a spacer (see p. 162), for use during severe attacks.
For the parents of asthmatics, who want to keep an eye on how much of a drug is being used, most of the dry-powder inhalers allow you to do so.
Arthritis and inhalers
Those who suffer from arthritis in their hands often find inhalers difficult to use. There are several aids now available to help with this problem – ask your doctor or asthma nurse about these.
Do hold your breath
Whichever type of inhaler you use, it is important to give the drugs a chance to do their work. After inhaling, and when your lungs are full, you should hold your breath for at least ten seconds. Then breathe out, but wait at least another 30 seconds before breathing in again.
Side effects from non-drug ingredients
There are other ingredients in inhalers, besides the drug, and they occasionally cause side effects.
Aerosol inhalers are the worst offenders. They can contain up to five non-drug ingredients, such as propellants and surfactants. Some asthmatics are sensitive to one of these, and respond with coughing or bronchospasm when they inhale them.
If inhaled in large amounts, the propellants in aerosol inhalers can give a mild ‘high’, and asthmatic teenagers and their friends may - very rarely - begin abusing inhaled beta-2 relievers. Parents should be alert for the possibility of such problems, but not worry unduly.
Dry-powder inhalers do not need propellants or surfactants, so they are suitable for anyone who develops a sensitivity to these. However, they may contain lactose, or milk sugar, in addition to the drug. Enough lactose is deposited in the mouth and swallowed to provoke symptoms, such as diarrhoea and wind, in people who suffer from severe lactose intolerance (see box on p. 79). Trace amounts of milk proteins in the lactose may be a problem for people with severe milk allergy.
CFCs and inhalers
Aerosol inhalers have long contained CFCs, which are very inert gases (at ground level) and perfectly safe to inhale. Unfortunately, they cause serious damage when they reach the ozone layer high above the earth, so they are being phased out in asthma inhalers, as they are in all aerosols. Other propellants, called hydrofluoroalkanes (HFAs), are being introduced to take their place. The spray from an HFA inhaler may taste and feel different, but it should do exactly the same job as a CFC inhaler: the drug it contains remains the same. Research suggests that these new propellants are very safe, but tell your doctor if your reaction to your inhaler seems to change suddenly.
These new propellants deliver medication more efficiently into the lungs, so that usually only half the previous dose is required. Unlike CFC-type inhalers, they will deliver a constant dose until empty. In addition, they are not affected as much by below-freezing temperatures.
Inhale - then clean your teeth
Asthmatic children are more prone to dental decay than other children, and inhalers are suspected of causing the problem. No one knows, as yet, exactly which ingredient of the inhalers is the culprit - it could be a drug, or a non-drug additive such as a propellant. Alternatively, the fact that the spray from some inhalers is slightly acidic could explain this side effect. Brushing the teeth after using the inhaler, or just rinsing out the mouth with water, is recommended as a preventive measure.
Using spacers
A spacer is a large empty chamber that can be fitted to an aerosol inhaler (a puffer or MIDI). to make it more effective and easier to use. The aerosol spray goes into one end of the spacer, and the asthmatic breathes it in from the other end.
When using a spacer, you can breathe normally: you don’t have to take all the drug in at once. or hold your breath after you’ve inhaled. But you should try to breathe as deeply as possible, and hold your breath for up to ten seconds if you can.
Note that spacers are for use with aerosol inhalers only. Spacers allow the aerosol propellant (see p. 161) to evaporate, leaving tiny airborne droplets of the drug to be inhaled. Once the propellant has evaporated, these droplets are no longer cold, so the reflex response that stops inhalation is avoided.
During an asthma attack, spacers are immensely valuable because they allow you to get some of the drug into your airways even though you are unable to take a deep breath. There is a collapsible spacer, called the E-Z Spacer, which folds up into a plastic case small enough to be slipped into a pocket. In a severe asthma attack, having such a spacer could save your life.
In an emergency, if no spacer is available, you can improvise one (see p. 100).
Babies and small children, who cannot yet coordinate the in-breath with pushing the aerosol canister down, need spacers for everyday use. There are spacers designed for children under two years, with masks that fit over the nose and mouth.
When using a spacer, shake the inhaler and then spray it into the spacer once only. Inhale within five seconds. During an asthma attack, you can add another dose from the inhaler every ten seconds, until the attack begins to subside, but keep a count of how many puffs you use (see p. 100).
For a young child, shake the inhaler well, and fit it to the spacer. Put the mouthpiece into the child’s mouth, or put the mask on. Tell the child to breathe in and out steadily. Listen for the clicking of the valve on the spacer - this shows that it is opening and closing. When the child’s breathing is regular, puff a single dose into the spacer. The child should breathe in and out 5-8 times.
Priming a spacer
Prime a new spacer, or one that has been washed, by firing the inhaler into it about five times. Do this before you actually need to use the spacer.
The drug will coat the spacer walls, due to an electrostatic charge on the plastic. You won’t be able to see the drug as it forms a very thin coating.
When you come to use the spacer, no more of the drug will stick to the spacer walls, because they are already coated, so the full dose will be available for you or your child to inhale.
Priming new spacers is particularly important when the asthmatic is a young child, because there may be some delay between firing the inhaler and the child actually getting a proper lungful of the drug. The longer the delay, the more chance the drug has to stick to the unprimed spacer walls.
A spacer can be used on a baby while it is asleep, which may make life easier for you both. If you need to use the spacer while the baby or toddler is awake, stroke the mask against the child’s cheek first. Keep smiling and talking so that the situation doesn’t seem so frightening. If the baby does start to cry, keep the mask in place: crying will bring on a deep in-breath which is just what is needed.
For an older child, decorating the spacer with coloured stickers can make it appear less daunting. Try to make using the spacer seem like a game. If this fails, don’t get into a battle with the child – leave it a while and try again later.
Playing with the spacer when feeling well will help the child to see it as something familiar, not as a frightening piece of equipment associated with asthma attacks.
Nebulisers
A nebuliser delivers high doses of asthma drugs in an easily inhaled form. It is generally used for severe asthma only, or in an emergency to relieve asthma attacks.
A nebuliser can be attached to an oxygen cylinder, which enriches the air–drug mixture with oxygen. This is useful in severe asthma.
The only people who need to have a nebuliser at home for emergencies are those with brittle asthma, whose condition can deteriorate very suddenly and sharply.
For routine use, only a very small minority of asthmatics require a nebuliser. They include:
• Those with such severe asthma that they depend on large doses of drugs to control their symptoms
• Very small children or elderly people with severe asthma, who have difficulty using inhalers. For them, a nebuliser may be the easiest way to take their drugs.
The fact that the hospital’s nebuliser is so effective in an emergency gives it a special mystique for many people, who assume that nebulisers are a magical cure for asthma. Nebulisers are widely advertised in specialist publications for asthmatics and, while they are expensive, they can look like the answer to a prayer. Many asthmatics, or their parents, mistakenly believe that owning a nebuliser would be the answer to all their problems. In fact the nebuliser only works so well because it delivers a much higher dose of the reliever drug – a dose which also carries a higher risk of side effects. This high-dose treatment should not be used on a regular basis unless it is absolutely essential. No one should buy a nebuliser without first discussing the matter with their doctor.
Asthmatics who own a nebuliser should have detailed written instructions from a doctor about when and how to use it, and how much of the drug to put in. One hazard of owning a nebuliser is that it may give you a false sense of security during emergencies, and delay you from getting expert medical help when you need it. If the nebuliser is for emergency use you should be told the exact signs that indicate a need to use it and – no less important – the signs that show the attack is out of control and needs hospital treatment.
Take care, when using a nebuliser, not to allow the mist to escape and settle on the face or eyes. Regular exposure to steroid mist can cause cataracts in the eyes, and thinning of the skin on the face. Anti-cholinergics (see p. 156) can cause glaucoma if they come into contact with the eye. The mask must fit very tightly. As an additional precaution, place a scarf around the upper edge of the mask to cover any gaps. Wash the face after using the nebuliser for steroids.
Keep off the cough mixture
Coughing can be a useful reaction in asthma, evicting mucus from the lungs. But in some asthmatics the cough does not produce mucus and seems to be no more than a reflex reaction to the airway inflammation. This type of cough can be debilitating, but it is not a good idea to treat it with cough mixture which has no benefit and may mask the seriousness of the asthma. Tackling the airway inflammation with preventer drugs such as steroids is the best course. Simple expectorants, which loosen mucus, may be of value – ask your pharmacist about these.