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The Kiss of Death- Almost

An Italian lady showed up at a clinic complaining of generalized itching and swelling of her lips about 30 minutes after making love with her husband. Could kissing be to blame?

An Italian lady showed up at a clinic complaining of generalized itching and swelling of her lips about 30 minutes after making love with her husband. The reaction disappeared after treatment with cetirizine (Reactine). Tests showed that she had no food allergies. Doctors finally traced the symptoms to kissing her husband during lovemaking! Actually, the problem wasn't the kissing, one would assume that this activity occurred on numerous occasions without triggering the symptoms. This time though the husband had taken an antibiotic, bacampicillin, about two hours earlier.

The trace amounts of this compound that were transferred to the victim’s lips during kissing were enough to cause an allergic reaction. Physicians suspected the reaction after the 45-year-old lady revealed that four years earlier she had experienced similar symptoms after having been prescribed bacampicillin. She had then been successfully treated with cetirizine as well as with an intravenous injection of hydrocortisone suggesting an allergic reaction. In order to confirm the diagnosis, the lady underwent a battery of allergy tests to rule out reactions to food or inhaled substances. Then her husband was given either a placebo or bacampicillin on different days. Two hours after ingesting the sample he was asked to kiss his wife. Why two hours? Because that is roughly the length of time it takes for a drug to show up in salivary secretions. Just as had been suspected, the patient began to experience itching in the mouth and wheals on the face and arms about twenty minutes after kissing her husband on days when he had been taking the antibiotic. Symptoms disappeared within one hour after taking cetirizine which of course is an antihistamine.

Why was the husband prescribed the antibiotic? Gingivitis is an inflammation of the gums which can be caused by the accumulation of bacteria. It is almost always the result of inadequate brushing and flossing that allows plaque to remain along the gum line. Plaque is the soft, sticky film made up primarily of bacteria that accumulates on teeth and hardens into tartar. Gingivitis is not only a danger to the teeth but to the heart as well. Bleeding gums can allow bacteria to enter the bloodstream and provoke inflammation in the coronary arteries which can lead to heart disease.


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