A mother with a rare allergy to pressure on her skin is unable to wear jeans or a bra without breaking out in hives — and even had an allergic reaction to her wedding dress.
Stephanie Harvey, 34, a carer from Angus, Scotland, thought she was allergic to latex because she’d come up with an itchy red rash when wearing the material.
Yet it turned out the mother-of-two has a condition called pressure urticaria, an allergy to pressure on her skin, which she first noticed symptoms of in the summer of 2020.
The condition means she has an allergic reaction to basic things, including wearing jeans, socks or a bra — and she can’t even shower without having an allergic reaction.
Her low point was when she had an allergic reaction to her own wedding dress and she even comes out in blisters whenever she wears her wedding ring, saying: ‘My wedding night was horrendous. I was covered in hives…I was left with blisters where I had my wedding band on too.’
Stephanie Harvey, 34, a carer from Angus, Scotland, has a rare allergy to pressure on her skin and is unable to wear jeans or a bra without breaking out in hives
Once after being knocked into and catching her leg on the corner of a chair, she was left with a painful hematoma the size of a grapefruit
The condition means she has an allergic reaction to basic things, including wearing jeans, socks or a bra — and she can’t even shower without having an allergic reaction (pictured, her skin after wearing a bra)
Stephanie revealed she had struggled with skin conditions growing up, saying: ‘I’ve always had issues with my skin as a kid and was back and forwards with a GP about it.’
But her horror really began in 2020 when her skin started reacting to seemingly random things, which she put down to latex.
She had assumed she just had sensitive skin and prickly heat, but she began getting irritating and raised bumps which would sometimes feel like she was ‘on fire’.
She grew more desperate for answers following her wedding to husband Jamie Harvey, 33, in summer of 2020 when she had an allergic reaction to her dress AND ring.
Her low point was when she had an allergic reaction to her own wedding dress — and she described the wedding night as ‘horrendous’
The 34-year-old said she suffered the ‘worst’ allergic reaction at her wedding, calling it ‘horrendous’ and saying she was ‘covered in hives’
Stephanie described the night as ‘horrendous’, adding: »The worst was at my wedding. It was horrendous, I was covered in hives.
‘I thought it was weird that my dress had latex in it.’
She went to a dermatologist the following year and was eventually diagnosed with pressure urticaria.
She explained: ‘I thought I had a latex allergy so I was shocked when they suggested what it could be.
After suffering skin conditions her whole life, it was only in 2020 she was diagnosed with pressure urticaria, an allergy to pressure on her skin (left and right, suffering allergies on her face and ear)
How urticaria can leave you covered in an itchy and uncomfortable rash
Urticaria – also known as hives, weals, welts or nettle rash – is a raised, itchy rash that appears on the skin. It may appear on one part of the body or be spread across large areas.
The rash is usually very itchy and ranges in size from a few millimetres to the size of a hand.
Although the affected area may change in appearance within 24 hours, the rash usually settles within a few days.
Doctors may refer to urticaria as either:
acute urticaria – if the rash clears completely within 6 weeks
chronic urticaria – in rarer cases, where the rash persists or comes and goes for more than 6 weeks, often over many years
A much rarer type of urticaria, known as urticaria vasculitis, can cause blood vessels inside the skin to become inflamed. In these cases, the weals last longer than 24 hours, are more painful, and can leave a bruise.
‘I had never even heard of it.
‘The condition is just horrible. Sometimes it’s itchy, like there are bugs crawling all over my skin.
‘Other times it’s an awful burning pain that doesn’t go away.’
‘I’m on medication for life now but it’s the simple things that you take for granted that I can’t do — wearing jeans or a bra, having a shower, wearing a hairband on your wrist.
‘I can’t wear my wedding ring either and I am devastated because it was the ring I was married with, I don’t want to go and buy a new one as it won’t mean the same to me.
‘I have to live with this so the best thing I can do is make other people aware of it so they notice the symptoms and get treatment sooner.’
She is also unable to do many everyday things such as wear jeans, take a shower, and carry her shopping bags from the car without being left in agony.
Once after being knocked into and catching her leg on the corner of a chair, she was left with a painful hematoma the size of a grapefruit.
Now she wants to educate others who may be experiencing the same allergic reactions without knowing why.
She said: ‘It feels like something is crawling all over you all the time.
‘Showering was a task I didn’t expect to struggle with but the pressure of the water hitting my skin leaves me with red blotches.
‘Even small things like leaving a hairband around my wrist leaves me clawing at my hands.
‘I can’t wear whatever I want any more. I used to live in jeans but now I can’t, and underwired bras are off limits.’
Meanwhile the mother-of-two said she was devastated she can’t wear her wedding ring without suffering an allergic reaction
WHAT IS POLYMORPHIC LIGHT ERUPTION?
Polymorphic light eruption is a skin rash caused by exposure to sunlight or artificial UV rays.
The rash often presents as red bumps, which usually fade on their own within two weeks. Treatment is not usually necessary.
It is not contagious and scars are not left when the rash eventually heals.
Spending just as little as 20 minutes in the sun can trigger a flare-up. Some patients suffer from an itch.
Around 10 per cent of the population are thought to be prone to an ‘eruption, with women in their twenties most at risk.
She added: ‘Gym clothes are so tight that it feels like bugs are crawling on me all day.’
‘It’s tiring having to think about what I can and can’t wear or do it all the time.’
To make matters worse, she is also allergic to the sun. It is known as polymorphic light eruption and also causes skin flare ups.
She is now prescribed with super strength antihistamines she has to take daily, as well as extra treatments to help deal with flare ups.
The conditions are now well managed but she’ll have to deal with them for life.
Stephanie wants to warn other people who might be feeling exasperated dealing with similar symptoms and be as desperate for answers as she was.
She said: ‘I had no idea what it was when I was diagnosed, I’d never heard of it before.
‘As soon as I knew, I was able to search it online and get some more information about it to help me understand.
‘You never think you’ll get any conditions like this, until it happens to you.’