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The Cure: Beating Poison Ivy
Backpacker
May 2006 edition
5/1/2006
Escape is impossible: Poison ivy grows in all 48 contiguous states. And its
relatives, poison oak and poison sumac, amp up the threat in the West
and South. Your concern is urushiol, the oily resin these plants secrete;
it sparks an allergic reaction in 70 percent of us. Learn to recognize
all three plants, then follow the tips below to minimize your risk and
ease the buring itch of an encounter.
PREVENTION
- Wear long pants and high socks when hiking on overgrown trails.
- Banish
Fido from the tent if you know he's been running through poison ivy. Your
dog's fur can easily transmit the offending oil onto your skin.
- Rinse
your boots with water or swab them with an alcohol pad. Streaks or patches
of resin on your boots can lead to a rash on your hands.
- Back home, launder
items that you suspect were exposed to poisonous plant. Urushiol on unwashed
clothes can trigger outbreaks for up to 5 years.
TREATMENT
- You have about 10 minutes to remove the urushiol before it binds to the skin.
Thoroughly wash the area with slightly warm water (hot and cold water
can trap resin in pores) and use soap if you have it. Then wash it again.
Tecnu, a product formulated to remove resin without water, also works
well. An alcohol sanitizer or prep pad from your first-aid kit is effective
in small areas.
- Blisters develop within 2 hours to 2 days, depending on
your allergic sensitivity. An oral antihistamine and calamine or hydrocortisone
lotion can offer some relief.
- Apply a cool, wet compress to the inflamed
area for 20 minutes. Then allow the skin to air dry. The evaporation is
soothing.
- Scratch - but gently. Blisters don't contain poison ivy resin,
so even if they weep fluid, they won't spread the rash.
- The rash will
typically clear up in 2 weeks or less, but if it covers 10 percent or
more of your body or goes near your eyes, see your physician.
www.backpacker.com
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