This Is the No. 1 Mistake You’re Making with Your Allergy Meds—And It’s Actually Making Your Sniffles Worse!
Every spring starts the same way: one tiny sniffle, followed by a sneeze attack so aggressive, it feels like your body is trying to launch the pollen you’ve inhaled back into the atmosphere. Then come the itchy eyes, the inability to suck air through one and then both nostrils, and the tissues stuffed into every pocket and bag you own. Sound familiar? You’re not alone. More than 80 million Americans suffer from seasonal allergies , also known as allergic rhinitis or hay fever. “This time of year, the biggest culprits are usually tree and grass pollens,” says An Huynh, MD, an allergist and clinical immunologist at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire. They trigger inflammation in the eyes and nose and activate allergic antibodies in the immune system. “The next time these antibodies come in contact with pollen,” he adds, “they can cause allergic cells to break open and release chemicals that can cause sneezing, sniffles an...