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ALLERGEN TESTS for BUILDINGS ANIMAL ALLERGENS / PET DANDER PERSISTENCE of ALLERGNS CLEANING SUGGESTIONS DRUGS vs CLEANUP ALLERGEN DANDER STUDY PETS AS FAMILY MEMBERS REDUCING PET ALLERGENS CAT DANDER More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Plumbing Water Septic Roofing Structure Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
Pet Allergens, Asthma, and IAQ: Dog Dander, Cat Dander, and Other Animal Dander - Information for Asthmatics and Indoor Air Quality
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Animal dander in homes is a common source of respiratory irritants associated with asthma and allergies. Animal dander, hair, and other organic debris in homes can also result in a significant increase in the level of dust mites, mite fecals, and other allergenic insect parts and fragments. These two lab photos of human skin cells, animal skin cells (dander), and other debris are typical of a home where pets have been resident. The left photo includes a feather barbule fragment and insect fecals. The right photo shows skin cells and animal dander.
This article outlines the basic indoor air quality and asthma-related concerns from animal allergens (dogs, cats, other animals), recommends actions, and cites authoritative sources for more in-depth reading.According to the US EPA and other expert sources, [paraphrasing document cited below] animal skin flakes, urine, feces, saliva, and hair can trigger asthma or other allergic reactions. Dogs, cats, rodents and other mammals can trigger asthma/allergic reaction in people who have an allergy to animal dander. Proteins in these materials have been reported to sensitize people and can cause allergic reactions or can trigger asthma episodes in people who are already sensitive to animal allergens. The most effective method to control animal allergens is to remove the animal from the building, followed by thorough [professional] cleaning. I also discuss the effectiveness of various strategies for keeping your pet in a home with someone who has asthma or pet allergies. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use the links at page left to navigate this document or to go to Other Website Topics. Green links at left show where you are in our document & website.
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Signs of "hidden" animal presence: We often find evidence of other animals who have been frequently present in a home even though the human occupants didn't know it - either because the animal was the pet of a prior owner (Chinchilla hair at above left) or a nocturnal visitor to the food bins (mouse hair at above right). Finding evidence of animals might mean that additional cleaning is needed to remove their remaining allergenic particles.
The U.S. EPA indicates that allergens are found months after a pet (or mouse problem) has been removed.
My particle studies in homes with pets show that although a dog or cat who is never allowed out of the basement will concentrate its hair and dander at that level, I will find the animal dander and hair at all floors and in every room of the home.
I often find significant levels of allergens in buildings where the source animal(s) have been gone for years if professional cleaning has not been performed. Even when cleaning is thorough I can find allergen materials remaining. In fact, I find some levels of animal dander in most homes, even if the home has never housed a pet, and in homes where a previous owner had pets, the dog or cat dander is often among the most frequent particles found in my samples.
While careful and thorough cleaning after animal removal is usually successful at removing the bulk of allergenic particles, for people who are extremely sensitive even low remaining allergen levels may be a problem, particularly if stirred or distributed by non-HEPA vacuuming and dusting, by the operation of HVAC equipment, ceiling fans, whole house fans, or other sources of indoor air movement.
More suggestions for dealing with pet allergens in the home are in this document at the links at left.
After removing the pet or pest animal(s), the following measures are recommended: thorough professional duct cleaning, commercial steam cleaning of some materials, dry-cleaning or very hot water laundering of clothing, freezing of small items (to kill dust mites), washing and HEPA vacuuming of interior surfaces. Note that ordinary vacuum cleaning is not effective and may make matters worse for sensitive occupants as it causes allergenic particles to become airborne.
Animal dander particles can be less than 1 micron in size and thus may remain airborne for more than 8 hours after vacuuming.
Many sources offer advice aimed at keeping a pet in the home: keeping pets out of bedrooms and other sleeping areas and keeping these areas isolated from pet-occupied areas, keeping pets away from fabric-covered furniture, frequent washing of pets, frequent house cleaning using the extensive means described above are all listed.
More suggestions for dealing with pet allergens in the home are in this document at the links at left.
No expert sources other than drug suppliers cite using medication as the first choice in addressing pet allergies. On the other hand, most expert sources I surveyed agreed that "...the most effective method to control exposure to animal allergens is to keep your [building] pet [and animal-pest] free."
The following is my standard advice included in indoor air quality investigations when I find a high level of animal dander in a building, regardless of whether it's cat, dog, other pets, or other animals.
Animal Dander: According to the US EPA and other expert sources, [paraphrasing document cited below] animal skin flakes, urine, feces, saliva, and hair can trigger asthma or other allergic reactions. Dogs, cats, rodents and other mammals can trigger asthma/allergic reaction in people who have an allergy to animal dander. Proteins in these materials have been reported to sensitize people and can cause allergic reactions or can trigger asthma episodes in people who are already sensitive to animal allergens.
The most effective method to control animal allergens is to remove the animal from the building, followed by thorough [professional] cleaning. The EPA indicates that allergens are found months after a pet (or mouse problem) has been removed. I often find significant levels of allergens in buildings where the source animal(s) have been gone for years if professional cleaning has not been performed. Even when cleaning is thorough I can find allergen materials remaining.
While adequate cleaning after animal removal is usually successful, for people who are extremely sensitive even low remaining allergen levels may be a problem, particularly if stirred or distributed by HVAC equipment or other sources of air movement.
After removing the pet or pest animal(s), the following measures are recommended: thorough professional duct cleaning, commercial steam cleaning of some materials, dry-cleaning or very hot water laundering of clothing, freezing of small items (to kill dust mites), washing and HEPA vacuuming of interior a surfaces. Note that ordinary vacuum cleaning is not effective and may make matters worse for sensitive occupants as it causes allergenic particles to become airborne. Animal dander particles can be less than 1 micron in size and thus may remain airborne for more than 8 hours after vacuuming.
Some people with allergies and even asthma (and of course others without these complaints) have pets who have become such a loved family member that "getting the animal out of the house" is not something they're not willing to consider. Some of my clients have taken this position and stuck with it until the sufferer's asthma became acute. When I was a boy, and was terribly allergic to cats, we had them in our home anyway. I loved my cats and played with them constantly, with running eyes, sneezing, and a runny nose the whole time. Luckily for me it was a childhood allergy that I outgrew, or perhaps became immune-to. Some remarkable studies have shown that living in a very sterile environment increases our vulnerability to some diseases and allergies. Farm kids who are exposed to enormously higher levels of allergens than city kids, have a much lower incidence of asthma. If you're allergic or asthmatic you should discuss these concerns with your doctor and should be candid about your exposure and your intentions regarding the pet.
Restricting a pet to only certain rooms or floors in a house might reduce the allergen level in some areas but it may not reduce it enough to alleviate suffering for anyone who is sensitized. Furthermore this is not the happiest life for a pet to live in the basement away from its family.
What else can you do to reduce the indoor animal dander problem in a home with asthmatics or allergics? These suggestions are roughly in order of importance and effectiveness, in the author's opinion, with some consideration given to ease of implementation.
At the end of the day, while I have verified that creating an anti-dust, hard surface, no-clutter environment, combined with regular cleaning and pet restrictions (no dogs in the bedroom), if there are animals in the home there will be animal dander throughout the home, moved there by the combination of shedding animals, moving air, and moving people.
More expert information on this topicMore Reading: specific to topics discussed in this document:
What indoor humidity should we maintain
in order to avoid a mold problem?
Air Conditioning System Blower Fans & Filters Cascading for Optimum Indoor Air Quality
The Use of Ozone Indoors for Control of Odors and Mold
Removal in Buildings: A Summary of Hazards and False Claims.
Reference and source for both paraphrasing and quotations above:
InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map - Building Inspection, Diagnosis, & Repair, Environmental Inspection & Testing - Research Website
The Mold Information Center: What to Do About Mold in Buildings, When and How
to Inspect for Mold, Clean Up Mold, or Avoid Mold Problems
Home Inspection Construction Consulting Services & advice for home buyers
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our instructions on how to collect and mail mold samples to our lab
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