Sunlight Allergies May Affect Up to 20% of World's Population - East Idaho News
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Sunlight Allergies May Affect Up to 20% of World’s Population

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ht chelsey madore mi 130402 wg?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1364986341504Chelsey Madore(NEW YORK) — After just a few moments in the sun, Chelsey Madore knows a field of itchy red bumps will spread across her neck, chest, forearms and hands.  Sometimes she gets a headache.  And sometimes the rash on her hands is so severe it erupts into puss-filled blisters.

“I can’t stay out in the sun for more than 10 minutes at a time without having a reaction,” she said.  “It’s hard not to feel like a vampire.”

Madore, a makeup artist who lives in Santa Monica, Calif., has an allergy to the sun called polymorphous light eruption, or PMLE — a condition that’s estimated to affect 5 to 20 percent of the global population.

Women seem to be more susceptible than men, and in some cases, there can be a hereditary or genetic component.  The condition often arises in early adulthood, but young children sometimes contract a related allergy — juvenile spring eruption — that tends to attack the ears and face.

Childhood sun allergies usually improve with increased sun exposure and disappear with age.  Not so for adult-onset sun allergies. 

In Madore’s case, she first began developing sun-related rashes when she was about 16 years old.  But the condition worsened significantly when she moved from cloudy Maine to sunny California in her early 20s.

“In Maine, the sun isn’t so obvious, but once I moved that’s when I really began noticing the connection between the sun and rashes,” she said.

Madore has a fair complexion, but according to Dr. Chris Adigun, an assistant professor and dermatologist at NYU Langone Medical Center, there is little connection between solar allergies and skin color.

“Sun allergies are unrelated to how light your skin is or how easily you sunburn.  Any skin pigmentation can have this condition,” she said.

Though some medical experts don’t recognize PMLE as a true allergy, Adigun said she believed that was because the body’s immune system identifies a foreign invader — in this case sun-altered skin — and unleashes a defense in the form of antibodies.

A more severe form of solar allergy called porphyria can cause blisters, swelling, cramping, paralysis — and in extreme cases, psychosis.  Though exceedingly rare, porphyria has become something of a celebrity, having been featured on House, Scrubs and ABC’s Castle.

Copyright 2013 ABC News Radio

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