Anaphylactic Shock: Just Another Reason To Get High

Yesterday evening I was chatting with my friend Brianne outside when I had two sudden sharp pains in my neck. I touched the spot and It felt like I had rubbed a thistle into my throat, so I asked Bri if I had something on my neck. She took a look and found two small bug bites surrounded by a big red blotch. I was on my way out the door, so I headed home planning on taking an antihistamine.

I live a block and a half away from Brianne’s house, and by the time I got home my tongue was swollen, and the back of my throat was beginning to swell shut. Chris had, thankfully, been sent home early from work, so I tossed the kids his way, gave a very brief explanation and took myself to the ER. ( I know, I know, I drove myself to the ER while in the pre stages of anaphylactic shock. Dumb, dumb, dumb.) The ER is three minutes from my house, and since half my face and my neck had gone numb, and swallowing was becoming an issue, I bolted through the doors, ignored the huge piles of paperwork, and poked the button they have for people who are bleeding profusely or who can’t breathe. I wrung my hands thinking, “C’mon, c’mon. . .open the door already” for the very long ten seconds it took them to answer.

They put an oxegyn monitor on one hand and asked me where I would like my IV. It wasn’t, “would you like an IV”, or “how about an IV”, it was “We’re putting this in you, so wrist or elbow, and make it snappy!” I went with the elbow (wrist IVs never go well with me, I have no idea why.) They gave me some steroids and then after I explained that I drove myself and I tend to be a feather weight on drugs, they gave me half the dose of IV Benadryl.

Let me tell you, these drugs combined are some fun stuff. My head was swimming, and I was getting a bit giggly while I kept nodding off. Every time I nodded off, my legs would jerk and I’d be awake again, snickering over my involuntary kicking, and trying to figure out which one of the three guys checking on me was my doctor and which were nurses, and also worrying that my oxygen monitor was broken because it was reading in the eighties, when mine had always read in the ninety-nine or hundredth percentile before. Then I remembered why I was there and taking this trip to begin with, and started giggling again! About ten minutes into this, I started thinking that since I was enjoying this so much, another dose would be really fun. Unfortunately, the swelling was already going down, so another dose was out of the question, and I returned to sanity before I was able to embarrass myself by asking for more.

They watched me for a few hours, and then sent me home after I swore I was good to drive. At home, I passed out immediately and slept like a log until four am, when I awoke with a jolt, like I always do at four am, except this time, I wasn’t thirsty, like I usually am at four in the morning. I was wide awake and craving stuffing. Since it’s not Thanksgiving, I didn’t have any on hand, which kind of bummed me out. I called my sister in England, but she wasn’t home, so I called my mom, who was home and wondering why I was calling her at five am my time. I blamed the steroids, and then went on to scrub my floors, clean the kitchen, take the garbage out, pick up the dining room and living room and sort laundry, all before six am, when I woke up the kids.

So now it’s eight. And I’m blogging. And breathing.

13 Comments »

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  1. When I had my first daughter (by c section emergency) I was young and when they put me on the drugs that made me loopy, my mom told me later that she knew I had never been on drugs because of the way I acted. She said I was asking why I was feeling so high in the sky!

    I’m glad to know you are better now because it isn’t fun not being able to breathe. Of course, knowing that and knowing you are with your kids doesn’t help matters I am sure and it probably scared you more. Thankfully you are well. Take care.

    Comment by Katina Mooneyham — August 22, 2006 @ 3:25 pm

  2. Take care of yourself girl!! Glad you are ok!

    Comment by Adrienne — August 22, 2006 @ 8:38 pm

  3. Take care of yourself girl!! Glad you are ok!

    Comment by Adrienne — August 22, 2006 @ 8:38 pm

  4. scarey scarey stuff! Glad you’re okay now.

    Comment by msdramateacherlady — August 23, 2006 @ 12:06 am

  5. wow, now thats some scarey stuff! I’m glad that you are okay!

    Comment by Nikkie — August 23, 2006 @ 12:11 am

  6. I am glad you are ok, and you should have let dh drive you!! Crazy! ;)

    Comment by Lawanda — August 23, 2006 @ 12:31 pm

  7. Scarry is not a good enough word but scary is what it was. Look on the bright side, you got some good house cleaning done!

    Comment by Soli — August 23, 2006 @ 11:14 pm

  8. “I’ll have what she’s having!” LOL

    I remember going unconscience to some drugs that the hospital gave me for back pain. Scary….I would have loved to have the “fun stuff!”

    Glad you are ok now!

    Tammy
    www.beadsofcharm.com

    Comment by Tammy — August 24, 2006 @ 6:31 pm

  9. Scary! Glad all is fine. Thanks for stopping by my site!

    Comment by Pass the torch — August 25, 2006 @ 1:57 am

  10. Glad you’re okay. Be careful out there!

    Comment by Cindy — August 28, 2006 @ 4:27 am

  11. Wow Lou, that whole second to last paragraph reminds me of Lynette on her son’s ADD drugs… you were doing everything! Take care and keep healthy!

    xoxo
    Katie

    Comment by Katie Harris — August 30, 2006 @ 2:39 am

  12. Oh my god, that’s scary. Glad you’re okay.

    But also, could I get me some of those drugs so I could get my house clean?

    Comment by Ella — August 30, 2006 @ 3:46 pm

  13. My wife, mother of 2, and spouse for 10 years, just suffered from a near death experience from anaphylaxis while I was away on business. Families need to have an emergency plan in place if anything like this ever happens. You can read her story here.

    Anaphlactic Schock story of my wife.

    Comment by David — September 22, 2007 @ 7:55 am

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