These nasty weeds - poison ivy, poison sumac
and poison oak - are the single most common cause of allergic reactions
in North America.
Poison ivy, poison oak and poison sumac grow
almost everywhere in North America, except Hawaii, Alaska and some desert
areas of Nevada. Poison Ivy usually grows east of the Rocky Mountains and
in Canada. Poison Oak grows in the Western United States. Poison sumac
grows in the eastern states and Southern Canada.
In the East, Midwest and South, Poison Ivy grows as a vine. In the far Northern and Western United States, Canada and around the Great Lakes, it grows as a shrub. Each leaf has three leaflets.
Poison Sumac grows in standing water in peat bogs in the Northeast and Midwest and in swampy areas in parts of the Southeast. Each leaf has seven to 13 leaflets.
Poison ivy rash is an allergic contact rash (dermatitis) caused by contact with an oil called urushiol (you-ROO-shee-ol). Urushiol is found in the sap of poison ivy, poison oak and poison sumac. It is a colorless or pale yellow oil that oozes from any cut or crushed part of the plant, including the roots, stems and leaves. After exposure to air, urushiol turns brownish-black, making it easier to spot. Contact with urushiol can occur in three ways:
Direct contact - touching the sap of the toxic
plant.
Indirect contact - touching something to which
urushiol has spread. The oil can stick to the fur of animals, to garden
tools or sports equipment, or to any objects that have come into contact
with a crushed or broken plant.
Airborne urushiol particles, such as from
burning plants, may come in contact with your skin.
Once urushiol touches the skin, it begins
to penetrate in minutes. In those who are sensitive, a reaction appears
as a line or streak of rash, usually within 12 to 48 hours. Redness and
swelling occur, often followed by blisters and severe itching. In a few
days, the blisters may become crusted and begin to scale. The rash takes
10 days or longer to heal.
The rash can affect almost any part of your body, especially where your skin is thin, such as on your face. A rash develops less often on the soles of your feet and palms of your hands, where the skin is thicker. The rash does not spread, although it may seem to when it breaks out in new areas. This may happen because urushiol absorbs more slowly into skin that is thicker, such as on your forearms, legs and trunk.
Who's Sensitive, Who's Not
We are not born with a sensitivity to poison
ivy. Sensitivity develops after the first direct skin contact with the
oil urushiol. An allergic reaction seldom occurs on the first exposure.
A second encounter can produce a reaction, which may be severe. About 85
percent of all people will develop an allergic reaction when adequately
exposed to poison ivy.
This sensitivity varies from person to person. People who reach adulthood without becoming sensitive have only a 50 percent chance of developing an allergy to poison ivy. However, do not assume that you are one of the few people who are not sensitive. Only about 15 percent of people seem to be resistant.
Sensitivity to poison ivy tends to decline with age. Children who have reacted to poison ivy will probably find that their sensitivity decreases by half by young adulthood without repeated exposure. People who were once allergic to poison ivy may even lose their sensitivity later in life.
Some people are very sensitive to poison ivy. They can develop a severe rash with blisters and extreme swelling on their face, arms, legs and genitals. Such severe cases need medical treatment.
Learn to identify the poison ivy plant, and you will have taken the first step in avoiding poison ivy. The popular saying "leaves of three, beware of me" is a good rule of thumb for poison ivy and poison oak but is only partly correct. A more exact saying would be "leaflets of three, beware of me" because each leaf has three leaflets. Poison sumac, however, has a row of paired leaflets. On each of these plants, the middle or end leaflet is on a longer stalk than the other two or more leaflets. This differs from many other look-alikes.
Poison ivy can have different forms. It grows as a vine, climbing vine or low shrub. Poison oak, with its with oak-like leaves, is a low shrub in the East and can be a low or high shrub in the West. Poison sumac grows to a tall shrub or small tree. The plants also differ in where they grow. Poison ivy grows in fertile, well-drained soil. Western poison oak grows wherever there is enough water, and Eastern poison oak prefers sandy soil but sometimes grows near lakes. Poison sumac tends to grow in standing water, such as peat bogs.
These weeds are most dangerous in the spring and summer. That's when there is plenty of sap and the plants easily bruise. The leaves may have black marks where they have been injured. Although poison ivy rash is usually a summer complaint, cases sometimes occur in winter, when people burn wood that has urushiol on it or cut poison ivy vines for wreaths.
Know how to recognize these toxic plants in all seasons. In the early fall, the leaves can turn colors such as yellow or red when other plants are still green. The berry-like fruit on the mature female plants also changes color in fall, from green to off-white, and in the winter the plants lose their leaves. In the spring, poison ivy has yellow-green flowers.
What To Do About Poison Ivy
Prevent the misery of poison ivy by looking
out for the plant when you are outdoors and staying away from it. You can
destroy these weeds with herbicides in your own backyard, but this is not
practical elsewhere. If you are going to be where you know poison ivy likely
grows, wear long pants and long sleeves, boots and gloves. Remember that
the plant's nearly invisible oil -- urushiol -- sticks to almost all surfaces.
Do not let pets run through wooded areas since they may carry home urushiol
on their fur. Because urushiol can even travel in the wind if it burns
in a fire, do not burn plants that look like poison ivy.
Barrier skin creams such as a lotion containing
bentoquatum (IvyBIock@) offer some protection before contact with poison
ivy, poison oak or poison sumac. This over-the-counter product prevents
urushiol from penetrating the skin.
Barrier creams offer little hope against poison
oak and ivy, although new products may offer some protection. These may
soon be marketed throughout the United States. Dermatologists are also
working on a skin treatment to prevent urushiol from penetrating the skin.
Ask your physician about new treatments available that might help to protect
you.
Treatment--A Poison Ivy Primer
If you think you've had a brush with poison
ivy, poison oak or poison sumac, follow these simple steps:
Wash all exposed areas with cold running water
as soon as you can reach a stream, lake or garden hose. If you can do this
within five minutes, the water may keep the urushiol from contacting your
skin and spreading to other parts of your body. Within the first 30 minutes,
soap and water are helpful.
Wash your clothing with a garden hose outside
or in a washing machine with detergent. If you bring the clothes into your
house, be careful that you do not transfer the urushiol to rugs or furniture.
You may also dry clean contaminated clothes. Because urushiol can remain
active for months, wash camping, sporting, fishing or hunting gear that
was in contact with the oil.
Relieve the itching of mild rashes by taking
cool showers and applying over-the-counter preparations like calamine lotion
or Burrow's solution. Soaking in a lukewarm bath with an oatmeal or baking
soda solution also may ease itching and dry oozing blisters. Over-the-counter
hydrocortisone creams are not strong enough to have any effect on poison
ivy rashes.
In severe cases, prescription cortisone can
halt the reaction if used early. If you know you have been exposed and
have developed severe reactions in the past, consult your dermatologist.
He or she may prescribe cortisone or other medicines that can prevent blisters
from forming. If you receive treatment with a cortisone-like drug, you
should take it longer than six days, or the rash may return.
Immunization
Investigators have found that most people
could be immunized against poison ivy through prescription pills. These
pills contain gradually increasing amounts of active extract from the plants.
However, this procedure can take four months to achieve a reasonable degree
of "hyposensitization." In addition, the medication must be continued over
a long period of time and it can often cause uncomfortable side effects.
This procedure is recommended only if the doses are given before contact
with the plant, and only for individuals, such as firefighters, who must
live or work in areas where they come into constant contact with poison
ivy. Consult your dermatologist for his or her advice on whether you should
consider immunization.
Common Myths About Poison Ivy
Scratching poison ivy blisters will spread
the rash. False. The fluid in the blisters will not spread the rash. Before
blisters form, the rash is spread by urushiol on your hands, for instance,
by scratching your nose or wiping your forehead. Avoid excessive scratching
of your blisters. Your fingernails may carry bacteria that could cause
an infection.
Poison ivy rash is "catching." False. The rash is a reaction to urushiol. The rash cannot pass from person to person; only urushiol can be spread by contact.
Once allergic, always allergic to poison ivy. False. A False. A person's sensitivity changes over time, even from season to season. People who were sensitive to poison ivy as children may not be allergic as adults.
Dead poison ivy plants are no longer toxic. False. Urushiol remains active for up to several years. Never handle dead plants that look like poison ivy.
Rubbing weeds on the skin can help. False. Usually, prescription cortisone preparations are required to decrease the itching.
One way to protect against poison ivy is by keeping yourself covered outdoors. True. However, urushiol can stick to your clothes, which your hands can touch and then spread the oil to uncovered parts of your body. For uncovered areas, barrier creams are sometimes helpful. Learn to recognize poison ivy so you can avoid contact with it.
Pictured below, the fruit and seeds of vine or shrub poison ivy. These pictures were taken in early spring. Needless to say, the fruit is also toxic.
Two very good links listed below:
http://poisonivy.aesir.com/view/fastfacts.html
http://ontarioshrubs.com/poisonivy/index.html
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