Signs you’re sexually
allergic to someone – Are you sexually allergic to your partner? You’ve
searched forever but you think that you’ve finally found the man of your
dreams. He’s funny, smart, sexy as hell and thinks you’re amazing.
You
couldn’t have found anyone more perfectly matched … and then you have
sex.
More..
It feels great until you start to swell up, a rash breaks out, and you
feel as if your lady parts are on fire. It turns out you’re sexually
allergic to Mr. Right. Yes, you can have a sexual allergy to someone.
In a piece on XOJane, author Leonie Blackwell writes,
“Every time we
[she and her husband] had sex, there was immediate pain and a burning
sensation. The area would become red and swell up, then over the next
week the skin cells would shed and fall off. I would be left in agony
and the pain lingered for days.”
We’ve all heard about common sex-related allergies that women can get on
occasion. These allergies are fairly mild skin rashes brought on by the
body’s sensitivity to a foreign substance like a douche, spermicidal
jelly, vaginal creams, and even latex condoms.
The resulting rash can be
annoying and even put a couple’s sexual activity on hold for a week or
so, but these kinds of allergies don’t tend to be that serious and
generally clear up pretty quickly.
However, Human Seminal Plasma Hypersensitivity, or sperm allergy, is a
rare allergic reaction to the proteins found in a man’s semen.
Sperm
allergies affect up to 40,000 womenin the United States alone.
A sperm allergy may be discovered the first time a woman has sex, but
sometimes it happens after a woman has had other sexual partners and had
no allergic reaction. A sperm allergy may happen with one partner but
not another, or it may happen with a longtime partner.
Women who have an allergy to sperm aren’t necessarily allergic to the
sperm of every man, it’s just one particular protein in one specific
man’s semen that they react to.
The woman’s symptoms may be minor or
severe, and they are difficult to recognize because some of them — like
heavy breathing and sweating — are regular things that happen while the
body is engaged in sex.
Sperm allergy can also be misdiagnosed as vaginitis (inflammation of the
vagina), a yeast infection, a sexually-transmitted disease (STD) like
herpes, and even the flu.
Although not as frequently as women, men can also get sex allergies,
even to their own seminal fluid and/or sperm.
In his autobiography,
Losing My Virginity, Richard Branson wrote, “Kristen and I had a bizarre
sexual allergy to each other. Whenever we made love, a painful rash
spread across me which would take about three weeks to heal.”
Be on the lookout for these symptoms of a sex allergy:
Wheezing
Itching
Hives
Vaginal burning
Swelling
Chest tightness
Vomiting
Diarrhea
Blistering
Loss of consciousness
Complete circulatory collapse
There’s been no conclusive evidence on what the triggers are, but when
the plasma enters the affected woman’s vagina, her antibodies (a
person’s natural defense system) somehow bind to the tissue of the
vaginal walls, creating an allergic reaction within the body. It’s as if
the body’s defense system mistakes the seminal protein as an invading
foreign body.
Once the woman starts generating antibodies against the plasma, the
allergy, in many instances, advances in three stages.
Like an allergic
reaction to penicillin, the sperm allergy gets worse each time the woman
is exposed to it.
The allergic reaction is hard to predict in how fast and/or how much
worse it gets with repeated contact during sexual activity. It can take
several months to get critical, or lie dormant for some time and then
strike again.
After being tested, Blackwell spoke to her gynecologist and was shocked
by his diagnosis. “‘You’re definitely allergic to him’ he said. ‘But
there is isn’t anything we can do to help. There isn’t a cure. You’ll
just have to live with it.'”
That was in 1988, and luckily there have been some advances in the
treatment of sex allergies.
For some patients, the use of condoms can be
the answer — unless they have an additional allergy to Latex, in which
case condoms must be avoided.
Sex allergies can be extremely frustrating for couples and can put a
great deal of strain on their relationship. Plus, it adds an extra level
of tension for couples who wish to conceive, as conceiving can’t happen
through unprotected intercourse.
Another treatment is desensitization: when the patient undergoes allergy
testing to isolate the problem protein, then has a series of injections
(timed about 15 to 20 minutes apart over a two- to three-hour period)
of their partner’s purified seminal proteins.
After the injections, the couple has to have sex within 12 hours or the
desensitization won’t work.
In fact, the couple must have intercourse a
few times a week from that point going forward or the effects will wear.
The more sex, the better the results. It’s not often that you must have
a lot of sex on doctor’s orders.
Branson and his wife weren’t able to solve their sex allergy problem,
even with their own unorthodox treatment. “We went to a number of
doctors but we never resolved the problem,” he said. “I even had a
circumcision to try to stop the reaction.”
hmm
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