andrewducker (
andrewducker) wrote2024-03-20 12:00 pm
Interesting Links for 20-03-2024
- 1. 10% of people think they're allergic to penicillin. Testing found that 97% of them were wrong.
- (tags:antibiotics allergies )
- 2. The degree to which the Acropolis Museum is designed to shame the British Museum is spectacular
- (tags:museums history Greece UK theft )
- 3. Can you stab things with an arrow? And should you?
- (tags:weapons video )
- 4. The first 'cyberflasher' is convicted under England's new law and gets more than 5 years in prison
- (tags:sex abuse UK law prison )
- 5. Long-term leisure computer use linked to increased erectile dysfunction risk
- (tags:penis sex computers genetics )
- 6. Is this the worst economic inheritance since WW2?
- (tags:politics labour economics history )
- 7. Root cause of Alzheimer's may be fat buildup in brain cells
- (tags:alzheimers fat brain )
- 8. Cars are secretly spying on drivers and upping their insurance rates
- (tags:surveillance cars insurance )
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The view was that it was best not to take the risk as there are other antibiotics as I found during my recovery from a certain major piece of surgery back in the day.
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My chart now says that I am allergic to cephalosporins and probably to Bactrim (a sulfa antibiotic), after I saw an allergist. He tested me for the cephalosporin allergy, a test that involveed sitting in a waiting room in case I did show symptoms. He also told me that there is no test for whether a person is allergic to Bactrim, and that given what I told him, I need to avoid Bactrim, and if a future doctor wants to give me any other drug in that class I should have the first dose in his or another allergist's office.
The last time they wanted to give me an antibiotic, I told the doctor about the above allergies and added that "I do well on tetracycline," so she prescribed the related doxycycline. I volunteered the information about tetracycline, and don't know what she would have prescribed if I hadn't mentioned it.
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(Latex allergy is a very common one that is often misdiagnosed or ignored.)
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If so that is a plausible risk factor.
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Sunshine and being outdoors is, though.
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Also curious that they say "leisure use". Maybe it's far too hard these days to find a control group that doesn't have heavy use at work :-). Or maybe bens_dad is right and it's the "lap" part of "laptop" that's the issue - because of the heat, definitely not good for the 'nads.