
Exposure to plants of the family Anacardiaceae, especially Toxicodendron spp. (e.g., poison oak, poison ivy, poison sumac), can cause any or all of the following symptoms:
An irritating, oily sap called urushiol triggers an allergic reaction once it comes into contact with the skin. A person can be exposed to urushiol directly or by touching objects that have come into contact with the sap of one of the plants.
The following practices can greatly decrease your risk:
Use these treatment procedures:
Poison Ivy has slightly glossy green leaves that grow in groups of three. The leaf shape may vary, and the plant may grow as a vine or as a trailing or low shrub.
It grows as a climbing vine in the east, midwestern, and southern states, and as a non-climbing shrub in the northern and western states.

Poison Oak has leaves that are shaped somewhat like oak leaves. The underside of the leaves is much lighter green than the surface and is covered with hair.
It grows as a small shrub in the sandy soil of the southeast, and as a very large shrub or vine in the western U.S.
Poison Sumac is a small tree about 5 to 6 feet high. Each stem contains 7 to 13 elongated leaves without teeth, arranged in pairs.
It grows as a shrub or small tree in the northern U.S. peat bogs and in swampy southern regions of the country.

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Address:
750 Reservoir Avenue,
Cranston, RI 02910
Rejuvaderm Phone: 401.944.7546
RI SkinDoc Phone: 401.943.0761