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originally posted by: Pardon?
originally posted by: InverseLookingGlass
a reply to: ladyvalkyrie
1. "Inconsolable crying" is a common vaccine side effect. It's definitely not "normal". 4 hours duration means that your child likely had/has a brain infection. It probably did damage.
2. The symptoms you are seeing is what is known as atypical measles. The child's immune system is struggling to clear infection because it was injected under the skin and did not present as a measles infection should/would in the wild.
The recurrence of the rash with concurrent infection indicates autoimmune dysfunction which is a fairly typical result from vaccination. You will never get answers from MD.s and particularly pediatricians. They know virtually nothing about vaccines and toxicology. "Smart vaxxing" is an oxymoron. Your child now needs your love in the most desperate way. You must learn enough to evaluate and mitigate this damage. It won't be easy.
Did someone say your name 3 times oh anti-health purveyor?
Let's have a look at your "diagnosis".
1. Prolonged crying is quite common after vaccines. Whilst 4 hours is probably at the end of the range, having worked with sick kids for 30 years it's not unusual. It really isn't.
So no, the boy's brain isn't damaged by it.
2. Remote diagnosis by description is never a good thing to do. It's usually incorrect.
Atypical measles cannot occur with today's MMR vaccine as long as it "takes". It used to happen with the older killed virus MMR but not now.
Your description of how atypical measles starts is false and nonsensical as there's a described pathological way it occurs and it's not your one.
Raw recurrence of a rash does not indicate an autoimmune dysfunction and is not associated with vaccines.
Talk to someone who works day-in and day-out treating children in a clinical practice and please don't take advice of a fear-mongering, rabid anti-vaxxer on a conspiracy site.
I guarantee they know far more about it than this individual.
originally posted by: ladyvalkyrie
a reply to: StoutBroux
You're 100% right. The only way to know what's going on for sure is blood work. This last batch is still faintly visible but subsiding. Do you think blood work would help at this point? Or should I just wait until the next outbreak is in full force?
Is there a possibility of it being flea bites... little red bumps that kinda look like mosquito bumps, but a little smaller?
originally posted by: ladyvalkyrie
LOL! The dogs chase the cats out of the house, that was a one time photo op.
He has no allergies to anything that I know of. He eats peanut butter, strawberries, eggs, milk...no problem. No allergies to pollen or animals.
And the rash isn't like a flat, hives/allergy rash. It's little, raised, red bumps...almost like pimples but there's not actual blisters. The aggravating factors: first time-MMR second time-stomach flu third time-ear infection
Viral illness – the most common rash suddenly appearing on your child is rash due to a variety of viruses. Some viruses can be easily identified, including chicken pox, fifth disease, and roseola. Most viruses, however, do not cause their own specific type of rash as chicken pox does. These generic viral rashes can have many different appearances, such as lacy or pimply, raised or flat, bumps, spots, or blotches, and they often (but not always) start on the trunk, and then spread to the extremities.The most important thing to understand here is that if your child has a fever or is not feeling well, and breaks out in one of these generic rashes, then it is probably a harmless virus and nothing to worry about.Here is a brief description of some identifiable viral rashes:
OMG he's so cute .
originally posted by: ladyvalkyrie
a reply to: MarioOnTheFly
I've got a good sense of humor and I can tolerate jabs and jokes, so if you've got a good one let 'er rip!
I'm in a position where it's up to me whether or not he gets another dose of this crud. Either nothing happens...or he develops encephalitis or seizures or some sh*t. It's really nerve wracking when you're gambling with your own baby's health.
This is what's at stake here:
originally posted by: haman10
Well the rashes could be a part of anything . what you need to do is to take him to a pediatric allergy specialist and they'll tell you what to do cause what you described could be a variety of things and you need to make sure everythings fine .
it could be a Fixed Drug Eruption, is he on any meds ? is he taking Co-trimoxazole (Sulfamethoxazole / Trimethoprim) ? if not then it could just be an immune response to Viral/Bacterial infections .
Also when did you give him his first MMR dose ? i ask this because we give them when the baby is 6MO based on WHO schedule . you seem to have done it when he was 1YO ? why is that ? did you miss a dose ?
Could you describe the rashes for me ? are they bulge ? when you push them, do they disappear ? are they present only at torso ?
This is exactly what I was thinking (because this happens from time to time with our son). I can't remember exactly how the doctor described it but it was something along the lines of....
originally posted by: Bedlam
Is it a fine, pinpoint pink rash that appears at the end of some sort of viral infection, like a cold or tummy bug? One where he ran a fever, and is starting to get over it?
well thankfully what you describe don't seem concerning at all . but i've got some advice for you as your brother :
originally posted by: ladyvalkyrie
originally posted by: haman10
Well the rashes could be a part of anything . what you need to do is to take him to a pediatric allergy specialist and they'll tell you what to do cause what you described could be a variety of things and you need to make sure everythings fine .
it could be a Fixed Drug Eruption, is he on any meds ? is he taking Co-trimoxazole (Sulfamethoxazole / Trimethoprim) ? if not then it could just be an immune response to Viral/Bacterial infections .
Also when did you give him his first MMR dose ? i ask this because we give them when the baby is 6MO based on WHO schedule . you seem to have done it when he was 1YO ? why is that ? did you miss a dose ?
Could you describe the rashes for me ? are they bulge ? when you push them, do they disappear ? are they present only at torso ?
He is on no meds whatsoever. In fact, other than the mentioned rash and 2 illnesses he's a very healthy guy.
He got the MMRV at about a year and a half. His vaccine schedule is not following anyone's recommended 'schedule'. I just felt it was a good idea to wait 6 months for the first one then do one at a time to monitor for reactions. Mama bear instincts seem to be in working order, since he does appear to be sensitive to them.
It's so faint on him right now I can't do the push test. But it's randomly scattered bumps. They're all over but seem to be most concentrated on the torso. There's no clusters, no blisters, no sores, no pus or anything nasty like that. Kind of like little pimples (without a head). They're small and pink, but definitely raised. If he's laying down near a good light source, like a window, you can see them really well. It looks very much like measles, but not near as thick as the measles pics on the internet. And no other symptoms.
The second time it came up (the first being right after the vaccine) he had a stomach flu, so the diarrhea was caused by THAT not the rash, and possibly an ear infection- the doc said his ears looked red. The third time it came up he had a low grade fever and runny nose, turned out to have an ear infection. So, I'm pretty sure those symptoms were caused by the ear infection not the rash.
I guess he's got some weird viral thing causing the rash and it crops back up as a secondary illness anytime he comes down with a primary illness. I was just concerned about the vaccine since that's when this all started.
originally posted by: Rocker2013
a reply to: ladyvalkyrie
My advice is get your advice from a MEDICAL PROFESSIONAL, and NOT from a bunch of teenagers on a Conspiracy forum. This is you child's health you're talking about, stop paying any attention to modern snake-oil salesmen.