You were right to keep looking.
You're not imagining it. The workup just hasn't gone far enough yet.
This guide is written for the person whose hives or rosacea keep returning despite standard treatment — antihistamines that work while you take them but change nothing, creams that manage but don't resolve. It covers two skin conditions an unsuspected H. pylori infection has been linked to, keeps them honestly separate by evidence level, and gives a clear plan for what to investigate next.
It is not a treatment protocol. It's the investigation itself, written down — so your next move is far more specific than your last, whether you take it to a doctor or pursue it on your own.
Every claim is tagged Strong, Moderate, or Exploratory — so you can see exactly how solid each one is. The hives link is the strongest; the rosacea link is real but unsettled.
No. This guide is educational — written to help you understand the evidence, evaluate testing options, and identify questions worth exploring with your healthcare team or on your own.
Dermatologists manage the skin, and H. pylori is a gastroenterological infection — so the connection sits in the gap between specialties rather than in either one's routine workup. It's not a failing on your part. The international urticaria guideline even names H. pylori testing as an option, so raising it — with a doctor or as a self-directed step — is clinically supported.
No — the guide is sold separately from any test or product. It covers all three testing options — stool antigen, urea breath test, biopsy — what each costs, and how to ask for it. But a test only tells you yes or no; the guide is what tells you which test to request and what to do with the result, which is where most people get stuck.
The guide spends a section on this exact situation — what 'in range' obscures, what to look at in combination, and the secondary markers that frequently shift the picture without changing the headline numbers.
14 days, no questions. If the guide isn't useful, the Lemon Squeezy receipt has a one-click refund link.
Researched, written, and medically reviewed by a physician on the Welyon team. Every claim is drawn from peer-reviewed literature and graded inline — Strong, Moderate, or Exploratory — so you can weigh the evidence behind each one yourself.
Move from ruled out to figured out.
40 pages, eight citations, two conditions, one clearer next step.
Many readers find more than one guide applies. Each is sold separately — or ask about bundle pricing at checkout.