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Dryness & GSM faq

Allergy risks with HA, lidocaine, or polynucleotides—how are they managed?

Allergy risks with HA, lidocaine, or polynucleotides—how are they managed? True allergy is uncommon but possible. Hyaluronic acid (HA) gels can rarely trigger sensitivity (often to preservatives); lidocaine allergy is uncommon and sometimes confused with irritation; polynucleotides may be unsuitable with severe fish allergy. Management starts with a careful history, patch or supervised test doses when indicated, product choice, emergency readiness, and clear aftercare. Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Clinical Context

Who may be at higher risk of reactions? People with a history of contact dermatitis, eczema, multiple sensitivities to cosmetics/detergents, or previous anaesthetic reactions. Vestibular skin affected by GSM is already fragile; layering fragranced washes, liners, bubble baths, or high-strength numbing gels increases irritant risk and can mimic “allergy.”

How to approach moisturisers and lubricants safely. Start with fragrance-free, minimal-ingredient options; schedule a moisturiser 2–4 nights weekly; and match lubricant to your needs—water-based (versatile, condom-friendly), silicone-based (longest glide for vestibular dyspareunia), or oil-based (rich feel but not latex-safe). If stinging persists, pause and trial an alternative base (e.g., switch from water-based to silicone-based).

When to consider testing or referral. Recurrent delayed rashes/hives after lidocaine or persistent reactions to multiple topicals merit patch testing and ingredient review. Suspected local anaesthetic allergy should be assessed before procedures. For polynucleotides, severe fish allergy is a typical exclusion—discuss product sourcing; ® belongs to its owner.

Immediate actions for suspected allergy. Stop the new product, wash gently with lukewarm water, and use a bland emollient as a soap substitute. Seek urgent care for swelling of lips/face, wheeze, widespread hives or dizziness. Record the product name/ingredients and report via the UK Yellow Card system if a medicine/device might be involved.

Educational only. Results vary. Not a cure.

Evidence-Based Approaches

Patient information & first-line care: The NHS explains symptoms, self-care and when to seek help for vaginal dryness, aligning with a foundations-first approach (moisturiser + suitable lubricant) and fragrance avoidance.

Guidelines & prescribing detail: The NICE Menopause Guideline (NG23) supports offering vaginal moisturisers and lubricants and considering low-dose local vaginal oestrogen when quality of life is affected; product-specific cautions for lidocaine and local therapies are listed in the British National Formulary (BNF).

Regulatory & safety reporting (UK): See the MHRA medical devices pages and the UK Yellow Card site for guidance on reporting suspected adverse reactions to medicines and devices.

Evidence syntheses & reviews: The Cochrane Library summarises comparative effectiveness and safety of GSM treatments (e.g., local oestrogens). Overviews on PubMed discuss contact allergy, local anaesthetic hypersensitivity (rare), and irritant versus allergic patterns in vulval dermatology.

Applying the evidence: Minimise excipients, introduce one change at a time, and match product base to symptom triggers. Reserve test dosing/patch testing for uncertain cases, exclude severe fish allergy before polynucleotides, and maintain foundations and local therapy where acceptable. This keeps care effective while keeping risk low.