To: appalachian_dweller
208 posted on
06/11/2004 8:38:32 AM PDT by
Calpernia
(When you bite the hand that feeds you, you eventually run out of food.)
To: Calpernia
An Epi-pin is used to treat anaphylactic shock. People who are allergic to bee stings need to carry them. If your not allergic to stings, benadryl works fine.
I was back country camping a couple of years ago and was attacked by a swarm of yellow jacket wasps. Took 20-30 stings, made me sick as a dog. Keep in mind that bee venom is about the same potency as rattle snake venom, there's just not that much of it from a bee sting.
After getting back home and speaking with an advise nurse, I was told that after such a reaction allergies can develop so I got a prescription for the Epi-pin and carry it with me in the back country.
212 posted on
06/11/2004 8:54:14 AM PDT by
appalachian_dweller
(The RIGHT of THE PEOPLE to keep and bear arms SHALL NOT BE INFRINGED.)
To: Calpernia
Epinephrine styrette for severe allergic reactions.
Essentially adrenaline in injectable form, pre loaded so any monkey could give a shot.
213 posted on
06/11/2004 8:55:00 AM PDT by
null and void
(History is not a tale of self-restraint, and change is accelerating all the time.)
To: Calpernia
An Epi is for a really severe allergic reaction when absorbtion of benedryl orally is too slow and epinephrine is needed...the kind of reaction that sends the body into shock and down the tubes fast.
To: Calpernia
Epi Pen in RX is an injection for bee sting allergy
366 posted on
06/11/2004 1:39:54 PM PDT by
JustPiper
(My other half is JustPooper)
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