I am going to throw out something else. Is the rash on areas that were covered by her bathing suit or on areas that were not? What is the suit made of and how has it been washed?
I am going to throw out something else. Is the rash on areas that were covered by her bathing suit or on areas that were not? What is the suit made of and how has it been washed?
Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.
Donovan,
A few threads for you to read (obviously the whole threads won't apply to your situation but you may get some helpful info from them):
http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showthr...lorine-Allergy
http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showthr...pm-bad-for-you
I also talked with Ben and he suggested that you try and isolate which specific ingredient might be causing the problems by using them one at a time in the bathtub. (It was mentioned in threads I referenced.)
To cut and paste what he told me this morning:
"There's a thread in China Shop abt chlorine allergy u can point him to. But he'll need to do single item testing in the tub with just legs. I'd go polyquat, bleach, borax, dichlor. Once he has enough chems to maintain a pool, he can drain & refill. Chlorine alone is not the problem, but chlorine is rarely alone -- so no telling what's actually in his pool!"
Do them in the order he suggest above starting with the Polyquat. If that product causes no sensitivity issues, then you can proceed to the next one. Always drain and rinse out the tub well before using the next item.
When you get to the point of testing the dichlor, please don't use the product you used before. Actually, we usually only recommend using dichlor purchased at Sam's (100% dichlor) or Amazon's Kem-Tek dichlor.
The Polyquat is 60% which is the only algaecide we recommend.
Let us know what you find out and then I'm sure Ben will be around to advise you further. Hope this helps.
Thanks, everyone. I've taken a few deep breaths and calmed down. Fortunately, the list of things I've put in the pool is pretty short:
--AquaChem Shock Plus (58.2% dichlor and 41.8% "other ingredients")
--hth pH Down (a couple of small doses--3/4 cup each time)
--1 inch chlorine tabs in the floater (99% Trichloro-s-triazinetrione and 1% other ingredients)
That's it. Nothing else has gone into the water. As discussed earlier, I did overdose (by a factor of 3) on the shock when opening the pool. In light of the short list of ingredients, is it still worth it to do the bathtub test? Not trying to argue with those who know better; just trying to understand.
While I've had my pH down to 7.5, I never got it down to 7.2 as advised in a previous post. I also have not done much on reducing the alkalinity as advised above.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Need to add one thing to my list of chemicals added to the pool, which I forgot in my previous post:
3/4 cup of hth Algecide, added when I opened the pool about 3 weeks ago. That is really it.
Thanks for bearing with me.
Donovan
EDIT by Watermom: 2 posts in the queue were merged together
For those who asked about the rash...
It is appearing all over but is worse where the swimming suit touches the body. It's lots of small reddish bumps, packed densely together where the swimsuit sits, less dense on other areas like the stomach and back. The swimsuit is a two-piece.
I'm not sure what it's made of but will check and post. It's been washed with pretty standard washing detergent. I'll check and get more details.
The MSDS for Aqua Chem Shock Plus lists it as a skin irritant and sensitizer in section 11 Toxicological Information.
12'x24' oval 7.7K gal AG vinyl pool; ; Hayward S270T sand filter; Hayward EcoStar SP3400VSP pump; hrs; K-2006; PF:16
The reason for the bath tub test is to try and narrow down what might be causing your child's rash. If you test each of those items one at a time and she does not have any reactions, then you can drain your pool and refill and use those products only and she should be fine.
Got it. My thought was that those were all pretty well known chemicals that were "safe". Having read more, including PoolDoc's threads, I understand that nothing is really "safe" in this kind of mystery. Sometimes, I wish I could take back messages where I say something dumb and then realize my error. :-)
One practical question I have is quantity of each chemical. How do you scale it down to a bathtub? I saw in one of the threads PoolDoc posted a reference to 2 teaspoons of bleach. Does that scale the same for things like Algicide and pH Down? Or is there formula to use?
Thanks for the clarification, Watermom!
Donovan
I am asking Ben to see if I can find out amounts for you. I'll let you know when I hear back from him.
Actually, in the meantime, why don't you go ahead and start with the test with the bleach since that is the one amount we do know. I know it isn't the order he suggested above, but that's not going to matter.
Sounds good, Watermom. It'll be a few days before I'm ready to start testing; I'd like to let her heal up a little before trying anything else. She's much better today.
About the swimsuit: the outer shell is nylon, the inner shell is polyester, and there's a little spandex for stretchiness.