GoodHealthMD.com
The Treatment of Allergies for your Health
Sometimes natural allergy treatments do not help you each year in the spring
or the fall. As you may know antihistamines which do not change the allergic process but merely block its
expression.
Steroid nasal inhalers used for treatment of hay fever and other
seasonal allergies can be very effective, but some of the steroids are bound
to get into the rest of the body and these hormones weaken the immune
system. A preference among conventional treatments from doctors is the non-prescription
drug cromolyn sodium (Nasalcrom Nasal Solution). It works and is nontoxic.
If that doesn't help, you may have to try a steroid nasal spray such as
Vancensae, preferably for a limited time.
You don't mention what type of allergy you have, but I'm assuming it is
seasonal pollen allergy. If so, you might try nasal douching with a warm
saline solution to rinse pollen grains off nasal tissues and soothe
irritated mucus membranes. I would also recommend trying some lifestyle
modifications. All allergies have the potential to disappear if you make
changes in both lifestyle and your mental state.
Here are some other suggestions:
Follow a low-protein diet and try to eliminate milk and milk products.
Excessive protein ( especially animal proteins ) can irritate the immune system and keep it in a state of
overreactivity. The protein in cow's milk is a frequent offender.
Try hypnosis, which can lessen or completely prevent allergic reactions and
facilitate the immune system's unlearning of its pointless habits (in this
case, an inappropriate response to pollen, dust, mold or animal hair or
other substances that cannot really hurt us).
Consider whether stress impacts your allergy and, if so, take steps to
reduce it. I've seen long-standing, severe allergies disappear when people
switched jobs, left a relationship or otherwise eliminated a source of
stress.
Dust-proof your bedroom by eliminating wall-to-wall carpets, down-filled
blankets, feather pillows and other dust catchers.
Substitute window shades for Venetian blinds, which can trap dust; be sure
to wash curtains regularly in hot water to kill dust mites.
Encase your mattress in an airtight, dust-proof plastic cover; dust your
furniture with a damp cloth; and damp-mop floors regularly to pick up dust.
Consider buying an air filter. I recommend a HEPA (high-efficiency
particulate air) filter, which removes particles in the air by forcing it
through screens containing microscopic pores. These devices work well and
aren't too expensive. Get one for the main rooms in your house, or move one
from room to room regularly. Avoid air-filtering equipment that generates
ozone (HEPA filters don't).