Posts tagged Hayfever

What are the symptoms for hayfever?

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Question : What are the symptoms for hayfever?
I’ve been sneezing alot lately and sniffling and I know it’s not a cold cause I end up feeling better when I stay indoors or around the afternoon.

I also get heavy eyed and sometimes they get watery and Itchy. If it is hayfever could someone give me some tips on what to do about it?
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by Pete J
I think I know what your experiencing as I suffered from it for many years. Most often Pollen & grasses is a known cause of hay fever.
I approached a good Acupuncturist & after a few sessions I came right & haven’t hardly had another bout of hay fever.

I recall going to the doctor, with runny eyes & sneezing & having about 6 hankies in my pocket completely wet through. When I left the surgery, my eyes had dried out & I wasn’t sneezing, as I was prior to attending the consultation!!

So you have to find a good Acupuncturist who’s very good at his trade!

sneezy hayfever sufferer

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hayfever


more sneezes coming i think… Yes folks, you have months of this to come while allergy season is here.

I have systoms of Hayfever, running nose and sneezing, when I drink alcohol it seems twice as bad?

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Question : I have systoms of Hayfever, running nose and sneezing, when I drink alcohol it seems twice as bad?
My docotor has now said I have astma, my nose is always running night and day, please can somebody tell me what it is. I have never suffered with hayfever, the symptons do seem worse when I have drank wine.
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by tmin
Deena

Alcohol weakens your immune system and allows your allergies to take hold of you.
I to have runny nose at times watery eyes and these are not from hey-fever, but an allergy to dust, cigarette smoke, as well as other things at different times.
Most of all it turns out to be a nasal allergies that comes and goes regularly so my Dr. prescribe a nasal spray for me and it works very good especially when I use it regularly. Flo-nas or some other one.
So ask your Dr if it could be a nasal allergy….
Good luck and take care….cya….

Did a large number of people have hayfever say 50 years ago and how did they manage their symptoms?

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Question : Did a large number of people have hayfever say 50 years ago and how did they manage their symptoms?
Obviously a lot more people are allergic to a large number of things in the last couple of decades, but I don’t know if many people suffered from hayfever in the past. If they did, were they suffering without antihistamines or did they have remedies to alleviate the symptoms?
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by Moody Red
We did have antihistimines 50 years ago, but they made you drowsy, so most folks with hayfever suffered with it until the first frost. People who had hayfever did try to avoid the allergens, such as ragweed. There were other remedies used that often didn’t help.

How come my hayfever is worse at night when I sleep with the window closed?

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Question : How come my hayfever is worse at night when I sleep with the window closed?
When I sleep with the windows closed, I wake up at night because of my hayfever. When I leave it open, nothing bothers me. It would seem more logical if it was the other way around…
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by cwgrrl7
It could be the moist night air helping with your sinuses. Consider buying a humidifier to use at night at bedside, you’ll be surprised what a huge difference it makes!
I hope you feel better soon, God bless.

The facts about hayfever

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You probably

or someone you know suffers from allergies. Itching witness, swollen, watery eyes and red, stuffy nose signal changes of the seasons in homes and workplaces across the country. What these people suffer from allergic rhinitis or hay fever. The medical term for this condition refers to nasal congestion and itching, the most common symptom.

Hay fever is an allergic reaction. It is the reaction of the immune system to foreign bodies in the air. Hay fever allergies usually refers to the outside, the suspended material such as pollen and molds.

About 15-20 percent of the U.S. population has some degree of hay fever. It is also found in men and women. Usually hay fever is seasonal, but it can last all year if the allergen stays throughout the year. Spring and autumn are the main hay fever.

Hay fever, like all allergic reactions are caused by allergens, /> foreign “invaders” in the body through inhalation, ingestion or skin.
In hay fever, allergens are substances that the air in the respiratory tract (mouth, nose, throat and lungs) through the breathing and the linings of the eyes and ears, sometimes occur by direct contact. Most of the time it is difficult to identify a specific allergen.

Once these allergens come in contact with your respiratory system, producing white blood cells of the immune system antibodies to the substance. This overreaction to a harmless substance is often called a hypersensitivity reaction.

The antibody called immunoglobulin E or IgE, is stored in special cells called mast cells. When the antibody comes in contact with the corresponding antigen, they promote the release of chemicals and hormones “intermediary”. Histamine is an example of a mediator.

What are the effects of these mediators on organs and other cells that lead to the symptoms of allergic reaction in this case hay fever. The most common allergens are pollen in hay fever. Pollen is released by small particles of flowering plants.

It was moved by the wind to other plants of the same kind, the fertilized flowers so the plant again. The pollen of certain trees, grasses and weeds (like ragweed) are most likely to cause reactions. The pollen from other plants are less allergenic.

The time of year when a certain plant species published pollen or “fertilized” depends on the local climate and what is normal for this species. Some species pollinate in the spring and others in the late summer and early autumn. In general, the further north a plant that is /> later in the season, they fertilized.
Variations in temperature and precipitation from year to year on the amount of pollen in the air in a particular season. Other common allergens in hay fever are molds. Molds are a type of fungus that no stems, roots or leaves added.

Mold spores float through the air like pollen to grow until they find a hospitable environment. In contrast to pollen, but the forms were not in season. They are the whole year in most of the United States.

Molds grow both internally and externally. Outside, they thrive in soil, vegetation, and dead wood. Inside, mold (usually called mildew) live in places where not circulate the air, such as attics and basements, damp areas such as bathrooms and places where food is stored, prepared or discarded.

The amounts of pollen and mold in the air is measured daily in many parts of the United States and reports by the National Bureau of allergy.

The pollen and mold, in which people develop allergic symptoms vary greatly among individuals. Pollen and mold are not very helpful in predicting how a particular person will react.

The risk factors for hay fever are family members with hay fever, repeated exposure to the allergen and other allergic diseases such as atopic dermatitis or asthma.

Nasal polyps (small noncancerous growths of the lining of the nose). The allergens that cause symptoms in an individual such as age, he or she. reduce symptoms in some people with allergies, but not all, as they age. physical changes during pregnancy can hay fever worse.


Hay fever

Why does my hayfever get worse when I come inside from being outside?

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Question : Why does my hayfever get worse when I come inside from being outside?
When I am inside with the windows shut my hayfever symptoms subside. However, when I come home, even though the windows are shut and have been while I haven’t been there, but for about the first half hour my hayfever symptoms get worse than they were when I was outside (and I mean A LOT worse!!). Why is this? It can’t be anything in the house, it happens every year and only during hayfever season and we don’t keep flowers in the house in hayfever season because they make me sneeze!
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by Lisa E
I too have hay fever, but I get it real bad during the fall season. Anymore I get the sneezes -on and off- in the house, but it will only last for a bit while in the house.
Pollen reaches into our homes also, so when we come in the house we are not out of the woods as though to speak. If I have the central air running, then my allergies do not bother me as much. When pollen can get into our homes, it just sits there and like waits for us (who are allergic) and can enter our sinuses just like outside.
I do take over-the-counter meds for this and it helps me out 100%. I would suggest turning on the air conditioning to see if that helps you. If your allergies are real bad, then I suggest trying something to stop those annoying allergies. Best of luck on this…

How can I tell what causes my hayfever?

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Question : How can I tell what causes my hayfever?
I know there are many different causes of hayfever from weeds, grass and trees.

I have suffered from early June and am still suffering now.

I suffered from itchy eyes in June and not am suffering from a runny nose and excessive sneezing.

What is the cause of my hayfever?
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by Winnifred Way
Allergy to pollen is called hay fever. Generally pollens that cause allergies are those of anemophilous plants (pollen is dispersed by air currents.) Such plants produce large quantities of lightweight pollen (because wind dispersal is random and the likelihood of one pollen grain landing on another flower is small) which can be carried for great distances and are easily inhaled, bringing it into contact with the sensitive nasal passages.

In the US, people often mistakenly blame the conspicuous goldenrod flower for allergies. Since this plant is entomophilous (its pollen is dispersed by animals), its heavy, sticky pollen does not become independently airborne. Most late summer and fall pollen allergies are probably caused by ragweed, a widespread anemophilous plant.wik

How can I tell the difference between hayfever and a cold?

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Question : How can I tell the difference between hayfever and a cold?
I have sore eyes, a blocked nose and ears and the runniest nose *ever*.

I don’t usually get hayfever, although I’m allergic to dust. I’m in NZ – so its mid spring, yesterday had so much pollen I could see it in the air. I spent the day gardening. How do I know if I have hayfever or a cold?
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by Cee-Cee
that does sound like hayfever.

Hayfever??

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Question : Hayfever??
I’m 13 and my hayfever gets worse every year my eyes go really puffy and really itch 24/7 it constantly looks like ive been crying and is very hard not to itch my eyes, i wake up to find my self itching them, my nose is always blocked up, every morning when i wake up my throat is very sore. I’ve been to the doctor several times this year but nothing he gives me works, i’ve tried several other tablets including benadryl, piriton etc. i can’t use eye drops the kill my eyes i have a nose spray which helps for a couple of hours and i can only take it twice a day……any advice?
i been using the nose spray for about a month and thanx A.
hayfever

Best answer:

Answer by A.
How long have you been using the nose spray? It takes a month or so of using it every day before it really works. Also there things you can do to help keep the pollen away from you, like keep your windows shut, only brush your hair outside, and have a shower each night before you go to bed, otherwise ull be sleeping in pollen all night long. :)

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