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How do you handle allergies?
Do you just live with them or do you go see a med specialist? I have allergies from dust from the furnace vents(I change the furnace filter often), red wine and some over the counter meds.
For those that go to a doctor for allergies does the doc give you meds? If so do they work? Or do you just avoid what gives you allergies? |
Nose spray, mucinex..
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saline nasal flush kit. Comes with little salt packets and a squeeze bottle. I started flushing my sinuses once a week, and no longer have to see my doctor once a month for meds.
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Changed my diet, no sugars, no grains. Food and environmental allergies went POOF! GONE!
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I had HORRIBLE allergies as a kid, and into adulthood. Finally I went to the Oklahoma Allergy Clinic. They cured me of 99% of my allergies. I took two shots per week, for 20 years. Lots of needles, but my allergies are essentially gone.
I used to really suffer in the spring and summer when the trees were blooming and pollinating. Pecan trees were the worst. That is virtually gone. If I mow the yard in spring and the trees and plants are in full allergy mode, I might get a day of discomfort at most, but some pills and Flonase fix that. It is over the next day. So if you can endure 2 shots per week (104 per year) x 20 years or so (over 2,000 shots for me) you too can have much better breathing. |
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Something else I use is a saline rinse with a Navage. I used to just inhale the saltwater mixture until I could feel it running down the back of my throat. I called it waterboarding myself. |
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Now when the irritation hits I get the behind the counter stuff with the decongestant in it. Claritan D, I think. |
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As a kid I got epinephrine shots but I outgrew most of my allergies. Later on I got tested so now I know what triggers them and I can treat with OTC meds.
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Allergy is one of my specialities. With children of course, but same principals apply. As others have indicated immune therapy is often very successful and has been a treatment in the form of injections for a hundred years. We now have the same treatment in tablett form that you can take at home. Three years treatment and most people will get much better, some complete relief. Its now available commercially for some type of grass, birch and mite.
So if by dust you mean mite allergy I would not hesitate to ask for that at your doctors. In my opinion a very good treatment. |
My shots really did not do much for me the first 5 years. It was 7 or 8 years before I noticed a real change. After 20 years I was to the point of no more improvement. It was not a quick fix.
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Never noticed allergies as a kid but over the last 10 years cat dander, some dogs, and some minor hay fever bothers me seasonally. I take loratadine as needed for symptoms and it works well. No major life threatening attacks.
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Right after every test, they would ramp up the amount of my allergens in the shot so it really ached for a couple of days, and then it was one day of feeling normal and then time for another shot. The last 5 or 6 years I had very little reaction to the shots. That was when we decided it was to the point of no more advantage to continue. They usually did give me a cortisone shot after all the testing to make my arm feel better faster. I am in a textbook somewhere, or more accurately a picture of my body's reaction to pecan pollen. One of the first tests the doc scratched my arm with the allergen and within seconds said wow, turned to his nurse and told her to go get Dr. somebody, and to bring the camera. The second doc came in, looked at the spot and said oh wow! and started taking pictures. It was a "textbook, classic" severe reaction to an allergen. I don't get any royalties. ;) |
That sounds like it may have been a while ago. The method was in many ways rather primitive back then. Even now there are individuals that doesn´t seem to have a real good effect from the treatment but its rather rare. Fortunately with the substance in tablett form its also a walk in the park, basically with almost no allergic side effects.
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When I was a kid (mid 1960's) I was very allergic to poison ivy. I would have terrible cases.
It got to the point I had to get shots. My memory is foggy on the subject but at one point it seems they gave me a "preventative" shot. Now, I am not nearly as allergic and only get very mild cases. Don't know why. |
livi - I thought the tablets only covered grass allergies
do they now have them for other allergies? |
IDK about others but my shots were of the stuff I reacted to in the skin test.... which was about everything.
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My wife is (mildly) allergic to everything. She's started taking oral drop allergy therapy which are not covered by insurance while shots are covered. I'm not going there. She just started so no results yet.
I'm just now starting to realize I have allergies deep into my middle age. I always thought my colds just lasted a long time ;) My aunt, who's a bee keeper, says you should eat honey from within 50 miles every day to help with all the local pollens. I might try that. How is honey in a margarita? |
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I do remember vividly (1986) the one and only time jogging outside in the late summer there when Fireweed was in full bloom. With sweat, allowing the cooties to stick, every bit of exposed skin had welts and my eyeballs had bumps on them. It was hideous and frightening. I probably don't have as severe a reaction today as you do. Just lethargy in late spring and early summer. The Claritan D takes some of the sleepiness away. |
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Look up the Oklahoma Allergy Clinic. I would bet money they still do the shots. They are one of the large allergy clinics. They sure cured my allergies. |
I pretty much was allergy-free until maybe 1977 or so. That summer began my nasal congestion almost every day since. Severe. I did every OTC drug known just to survive. Brain fog, headaches, sleepless nights, watery eyes, fatigue. You name it. I did shots...nada. I did the flush thing...nada. I could treat the symptoms enough to function but was miserable. Like suicidal miserable. Did the cortisone nasal spray to keep the inflammation almost manageable.
Then maybe four years ago...poof, gone. No meds. No symptoms, no allergies. They vanished as quickly and as suddenly as they appeared. No changes in my diet or activities, or anything. I have no explanation for it. |
We both developed allergies when we move out here into the sticks. Dr prescribed Montelukast and it has been a godsend.
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The testing was really uncomfortable with all the injections to stuff I was allergic to. The good news for me, I was not allergic to any food. I was super allergic to pecan pollen, and I always hated pecans as a kid before I knew I was allergic to them. If I eat some pecans in a cake or cookie it is at best like getting the sniffles for a while, at worst diarrhea. I avoid pecans, but other nuts are fine. |
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