Hi,
I know this thread is old, but we've just had a nightmare with aloe vera allergy and this was about the only thread on the web I could find.
We have a chid who has regular intravenous injections to manage a health condition. We've always had aloe plants in the house, and in the past have found them helpful (on ourselves) for things like sunburn.
Because 'everyone' know how GOOD aloe is for the skin, we started using it after giving our child his injections. At the same time as this, he has sticky patches that we use to keep analgesic cream on his veins to numb them prior to the injection. He started to develop a reaction to what we though was the adhesive in the patches. So we put on more aloe... after a few days, his skin was so sore and weepy and scaly we couldn'd do his injections in his arms, he looked like he had bad eczma. We had to go to the local hosp. for them to do his injections in his veins in his hands (much smaller and harder for us to get). So we started putting aloe on his hands too. So then his hands started to get sore and we STILL didn't make the connection - assuming this time that he must be alergic to the analgesic cream itself.
It was only after he had 10 days of steroid cream (and we weren't using the aloe) that the problem subsided, and we were able to take over his injections again. (this was all over Christmas BTW). Yesterday he had a routine jab for the first time since the problem had subsided, and my other half said "Oh - I'll just put a blob of aloe on..." He put aloe on both arms and on both hands.
Last night our son came in to us at 3am scratching and sore on both hands and arms - gave him piriton and e45 cream. Only this morning when he was in the bath did we suddenly make the connection - it was the bl**dy Aloe Vera all along!
I am wondering if my son's allergy is actaully all that unusual - are there people out there treating eczma with aloe vera, unaware that they're maybe dealing with an allergic reaction to Aloe Vera?
I for one will never again assum that because something is natural, that it's safe or harmelss...
Oh - and my son is not blood group O btw - and I fail to see how blood group would make a difference in allergy sensitivity anyway - sounds like more cod science (like Aloe being a harmless, helpful 'every house should have one' healer...) but I am a bit sensitive at the moment.
Watch out for Aloe!!
Hollyb1