What is contact dermatitis?
Those prone to contact dermatitis should consider wearing unbleached, nondyed garments that are labeled as such. They could also wear clothes labeled as dyed with nontoxic dyes.
According to the Health and Safety Assessment of the Washington State Department, clothing dermatitis can result from dyes in clothes rubbing off easily on the skin. The department explains that commercial dyes are easily transferred to people in this way.
Remedies
According to the Safety and Health Assessment of the Washington State Department, blues and violet synthetic dyes often create skin irritation for those with this sensitivity.
Instead, select garments that are not dyed with artificial dyes or those that are not dyed at all.
Preventive measures
It will be a process of trial and error to discover which types of clothing will not irritate an individual with clothing dermatitis.
Source: http://www.ehow.com/how-does_5382336_can-dye-clothes-cause-rash.html
11 comments
Rob White
Last year I started getting a red rash around my ankles. It was itchy and in the summer so I stopped wearing socks and wore only shorts. The rash went away. I put on socks again, rash came back. Talked to a friend of a friend who had a similar problem. On his advice I only wore white socks, no rash. If I wear white thermal underware no rash on ankles, if I wear coloured thermals and I don’t put them over my socks, I get a rash with in an hour of putting them on.
But I don’t get the rash anywhere else, just my ankles, and only if there is dyed clothing up against the skin.
So I know only wear white socks, and high ones to have it between my ankles and the fabric of pants.
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