Aquagenic Pruritus
For years, after showering, I have suffered with a horrible, unbearable itch usually all over my arms, legs and thighs. In the past I assumed it was dry skin, and would maybe last about 15 minutes. Recently these attacks on my skin are longer, usually 30 to 90 minutes long. I use heat (a blow dryer) on the skin hoping that will help, or sometimes I stand in front of a fan blowing cold air. I usually find some relief in that, but not recently. I googled the symptoms and it sounds like a rare skin disorder called Aquagenic Pruritus. If anyone has this condition, Id like some information on symptoms and on treatment. Thank you!
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Skin Health Support Group.
Thanks for the reply. It does look like a safe drug that has long track record of usage behind it. Im about to get it going with my doctor and will let you all know how it goes.
Im a swimmer and for a long time practiced in a very warm, very chlorinated pool so the itching didn't seem un-normal when it started about 3 yrs ago. I quit that pool while still swimming. Starting about 2 years ago the AP ramped up to horrible; about a year ago to horrendous, when my wife found this site and I started taking Beta Alanine. It generally works really well, especially when I also chase it with a Gin & tonic. Some days are fine by comparison to others. I have noticed as few strange details about the AP.
If I swim, get out shower, towel dry and leave; its straight to Itch City.
If I swim, get out, air dry, I can them go about my business without discomfort or itchiness.
If I'm in the swim lane waiting for a set to start and someone rubs against my leg; In 5-10 min I'll be unable to concentrate on the Master workout, it itches that much.
If my wife wraps her legs around me; My legs itch for an hour afterward.
During a bad episode; The itching manifests itself more on the spots of skin damage (Actinic Keratosis) turning them very red, the itching isn't limited to those spots and on "normal" bouts there is no skin redness anywhere.
Type of soap doesn't matter
Hot showers are worse but it's incremental and a cold shower still causes the itchiness.(See above about toweling off)
Spa tub doesn't seem to bother me
Sauna doesn't seem to bother me.
Beta Alanine taken daily seems to help more and reduce the overall itchiness when it does happen, it requires another tablet.
Beta Alanine in tablets seems better than the powder form
Both forms take from 20-40 minutes to start feeling the tingling behind the ears which signals relief is eminent. It always seems to work top down, the legs are the last to stop itching.
My take away is there is definetly a pressure component to this, that i believe the simple act of toweling off is the proximate cause of. If i go for a run and then sit down on a chair: my legs will itch and If I lean back in that chair my back will itch, exactly the same as coming out of the shower. If i stood around until the sweat dried, I could sit down and not itch.
I am going to try Duplixent; and I'll let you know how it works out.
Thank you for this info.
Thank you for this info.
I'm going through the same thing and will try beta alanine and pray it works.
Thank you for this info. I too suffer from AP and it's driving me nuts!!
UPDATE:
dupilumab injection Brand Name: Dupixent
Does not seem to help Aquagenic Puritus at least for me.
So far I've taken the loading dose and the next bi-weekly injection, I will take the next injection but discontinue it after that, unless some drastic improvement occurs. So far at best a 3% reduction in symptoms, the day after the injection, so from God Awful to F'n Horrendous. Overall Beta-Alanine tablets, once a day is doing much better for me.
UPdate 2. Cromolyn Sodium, USP Oral concentrate 100mg/5ml ampule
I've been on this for three days and it is working. One ampule in the morning, one in the late afternoon. You dissolve it in a glass of water and drink it down. I took a shower last night, without a problem, worked in sweaty conditions that would have driven me nuts before, without an issue. Will continue to stay on this med and let you know about the progress or setbacks. I'm keeping the Beta-Alanine close by but haven't needed it yet.
There is finally a medical article on the use of Beta Alanine for Aquagenic Pruritus. By Stanford Ped Dermatologists : Link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/pde.14440?fbclid=IwAR2_d4qYfl_x_CWgS5RgXK8wOXMQYq0Uayoe3ReohNGrR916gmmHb08kTUA
I'm 53 years old and have had AP since I was about 12-13 years of age. I have it genetically - passed onto me from my father's side of the family UNC Chapel Hill ruled out the blood/bone disorder that can cause it. What works for me and how I mange mine: evening showers turning up the water as hot as I can get it the last 2-3 minutes of my shower; patting, not rubbing, myself dry after shower and putting on 100% cotton pajama bottoms on my legs and a light 100% cotton t-shirt on; AC must not be any higher than 70 F when I get out.
I have not used Beta Alanine - but I might try this. I can manage my AP with the above when it comes to showering. Taking Claritin during humid summers in NC does help and Sarna lotion. In my early years - tanning and Sarna lotion were the only treatments that I knew of and that helped b/c I didn't realize very hot showers would do the trick to keep from itching - i gravitated towards cool showers but that the wrong thing to do. AP is a horrible and debilitating issue that you must learn to control. Hot, hot showers and giving your limbs a little bit of sun certainly helps!
Good luck everyone!