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<br>In the late summer, about 23 million Americans have symptoms from an allergy to ragweed pollen.1 The outward symptoms will make life miserable for people that have allergies. This allergy can also cause asthma symptoms for people with allergic asthma.<br><br><br>You may feel uncomfortable when ragweed plants release pollen into the air. Your symptoms may continue until the first frost kills the plant. Depending on your local area, ragweed season may last six to 10 weeks. In most areas in the U.S., it peaks in mid-September.<br><br>What Is Ragweed?<br><br>Ragweed is just a weed that grows through the United States, especially in the Eastern and Midwestern states. Each plant lives just one season. But any particular one plant can produce up to 1 billion pollen grains.<br><br><br>When mid-August nights grow longer, ragweed flowers mature and release pollen. Warm weather, humidity and breezes after sunrise help release the pollen. The pollen then travels through the air to a different plant to fertilize the seed so a fresh plant can grow next year.<br><br><br>Ragweed usually grows in rural areas. Nearby the plants, the pollen counts are highest right after dawn. Rain and morning temperatures below 50 [https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=degrees%20Fahrenheit,creativecommons degrees Fahrenheit] decrease the release of pollen.<br><br><br>Ragweed pollen can travel far. It's been present in the air 400 miles out to sea and two miles up in the atmosphere. But many falls near to its source.<br><br><br>Turf grasses and other perennial plants easily overgrow ragweed. But where streams of water, farming or chemicals upset [http://www.doohos.com/node/133033 please click the following webpage] soil &ndash; like salting roads in the wintertime &ndash; ragweed will grow. It's often found along roadsides, riverbanks, in vacant lots and fields. Dormant seeds that are now living in the soil for decades may grow once the conditions are right.<br><br>What Is a Ragweed Pollen Allergy?<br><br>The task of your immune system is to locate foreign substances, like viruses and bacteria, and get rid of them. This response normally protects us from harmful diseases. Individuals with allergies have immune systems that react once they interact with allergens. When you are allergic to ragweed pollen and inhale it from the air, rhinitis (hay fever) symptoms show up.<br><br><br>Seventeen forms of ragweed grow in North America. Ragweed also belongs to a larger category of plants that will spread pollen by wind. These plants may also cause symptoms.<br><br><br>Members of this plant family include:<br><br><br>Sage<br>Burweed marsh elder<br>Rabbit brush<br>Mugwort<br>Groundsel bush<br>Eupatorium<br><br><br><br>Some household members spread their pollen by insects rather than by wind. They cause fewer allergic reactions. But sniffing these plants could cause symptoms.<br><br>Who Gets a Ragweed Allergy?<br><br>Seventy-five percent of individuals who are allergic to pollen will also be allergic to ragweed. When you have allergies to one form of pollen, you tend to produce allergies to other types of pollen as well.<br><br><br>When you have a ragweed allergy , you may even get symptoms whenever you eat these foods:<br><br><br>Banana<br>Cantaloupe<br>Cucumber<br>Honeydew<br>Watermelon<br>White potato<br>Zucchini<br>Sunflower seeds<br><br><br><br>This is called oral allergy syndrome (OAS). OAS occurs because your defense mechanisms confuses ragweed pollen with certain foods. Common OAS symptoms include itchy mouth, throat, tongue or face.<br><br>What Are the Symptoms?<br><br>Rhinitis symptoms often include:<br><br><br>Sneezing<br>Stuffy or runny nose<br>Itchy eyes, nose and throat<br>Itchy or puffy eyes<br>Mucus in the throat (postnasal drip)<br><br><br><br>If you have severe allergies, ragweed might trigger asthma symptoms, chronic sinusitis, headaches and congestion that can interfere with sleep.<br><br>How Is It Diagnosed?<br><br>If you believe you're allergic to ragweed pollen, view a board-certified allergist. They'll ask you about your medical history, execute a physical exam and allergy testing. They could execute a skin prick test to verify your allergy.<br><br><br>For prick/scratch testing, a doctor or nurse places a tiny drop containing ragweed pollen on your skin. They'll then lightly prick or scratch your skin with a needle through the drop. If you're sensitive to ragweed, you will develop redness, swelling and itching at the test site within 15 minutes. Sometimes your doctor may take a blood test to see if you have the antibody to ragweed.<br><br>What Can I Do About It?<br><br>There's no cure for a ragweed pollen allergy. But you can find ways to take care of and manage it.<br><br><br>Track the pollen count for the area. The news headlines media often reports the count for your area, specially when pollen is high. You also could possibly get your area's pollen counts from the National Allergy Bureau.<br><br><br>Stay indoors in central air conditioning when the pollen count is high. Get yourself a CERTIFIED asthma &amp; allergy friendly&reg; air filter for the air conditioner. Should you spending some time outside, try to head out before 10 a.m. and after 3 p.m. Ragweed pollen peaks in the center of the day.<br><br><br>Prevent pollen from being tracked into your home. If you may spend lots of time outside during peak pollen time:<br><br><br>Take your shoes off outside<br>Don't wear your &ldquo;outside&rdquo; clothes to bed<br>Have a shower and shampoo your hair during the night<br><br><br><br>You might even consider moving to get away from ragweed. This can often help you're feeling better for a brief time. But you can develop allergies to plants in your brand-new location in a few years. And ragweed is within every state except Alaska. A well-thought out treatment plan is just a better way to reside with your allergies.<br><br><br>Take anti-inflammatory or antihistamine medicines, and start treatment in the summer. Many over-the-counter medicines work very well to manage pollen allergy symptoms. They are able to also help eye, nose and asthma symptoms. Many newer antihistamines don't cause just as much drowsiness as older ones.<br><br><br>Anti-inflammatory and antihistamine nose sprays also help and have few side effects. You can even find eye drops for eye symptoms. Leukotriene inhibitors can help by blocking chemicals your system releases when you yourself have an allergic reaction.<br><br><br>For long-term relief, see an allergist about immunotherapy. This sort of treatment can reduce the allergic reaction to specific allergens. You will find two types: allergy shots and sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT).<br><br><br>Allergy shots involve giving injections of allergens in a increasing dose over time. They relieve symptoms for most of us and can last for years to decades.<br><br><br>With SLIT, you take a small dose of an allergen under your tongue. In addition you gradually become more sensitive.<br><br><br>If you have allergic asthma, your Asthma Action Plan may include some of these allergy treatments to assist you keep your asthma under control.<br><br><br>With the best treatment plan, you must see major improvements in your symptoms.<br>

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'<br>In the late summer, about 23 million Americans have symptoms from an allergy to ragweed pollen.1 The outward symptoms will make life miserable for people that have allergies. This allergy can also cause asthma symptoms for people with allergic asthma.<br><br><br>You may feel uncomfortable when ragweed plants release pollen into the air. Your symptoms may continue until the first frost kills the plant. Depending on your local area, ragweed season may last six to 10 weeks. In most areas in the U.S., it peaks in mid-September.<br><br>What Is Ragweed?<br><br>Ragweed is just a weed that grows through the United States, especially in the Eastern and Midwestern states. Each plant lives just one season. But any particular one plant can produce up to 1 billion pollen grains.<br><br><br>When mid-August nights grow longer, ragweed flowers mature and release pollen. Warm weather, humidity and breezes after sunrise help release the pollen. The pollen then travels through the air to a different plant to fertilize the seed so a fresh plant can grow next year.<br><br><br>Ragweed usually grows in rural areas. Nearby the plants, the pollen counts are highest right after dawn. Rain and morning temperatures below 50 [https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=degrees%20Fahrenheit,creativecommons degrees Fahrenheit] decrease the release of pollen.<br><br><br>Ragweed pollen can travel far. It's been present in the air 400 miles out to sea and two miles up in the atmosphere. But many falls near to its source.<br><br><br>Turf grasses and other perennial plants easily overgrow ragweed. But where streams of water, farming or chemicals upset [http://www.doohos.com/node/133033 please click the following webpage] soil &ndash; like salting roads in the wintertime &ndash; ragweed will grow. It's often found along roadsides, riverbanks, in vacant lots and fields. Dormant seeds that are now living in the soil for decades may grow once the conditions are right.<br><br>What Is a Ragweed Pollen Allergy?<br><br>The task of your immune system is to locate foreign substances, like viruses and bacteria, and get rid of them. This response normally protects us from harmful diseases. Individuals with allergies have immune systems that react once they interact with allergens. When you are allergic to ragweed pollen and inhale it from the air, rhinitis (hay fever) symptoms show up.<br><br><br>Seventeen forms of ragweed grow in North America. Ragweed also belongs to a larger category of plants that will spread pollen by wind. These plants may also cause symptoms.<br><br><br>Members of this plant family include:<br><br><br>Sage<br>Burweed marsh elder<br>Rabbit brush<br>Mugwort<br>Groundsel bush<br>Eupatorium<br><br><br><br>Some household members spread their pollen by insects rather than by wind. They cause fewer allergic reactions. But sniffing these plants could cause symptoms.<br><br>Who Gets a Ragweed Allergy?<br><br>Seventy-five percent of individuals who are allergic to pollen will also be allergic to ragweed. When you have allergies to one form of pollen, you tend to produce allergies to other types of pollen as well.<br><br><br>When you have a ragweed allergy , you may even get symptoms whenever you eat these foods:<br><br><br>Banana<br>Cantaloupe<br>Cucumber<br>Honeydew<br>Watermelon<br>White potato<br>Zucchini<br>Sunflower seeds<br><br><br><br>This is called oral allergy syndrome (OAS). OAS occurs because your defense mechanisms confuses ragweed pollen with certain foods. Common OAS symptoms include itchy mouth, throat, tongue or face.<br><br>What Are the Symptoms?<br><br>Rhinitis symptoms often include:<br><br><br>Sneezing<br>Stuffy or runny nose<br>Itchy eyes, nose and throat<br>Itchy or puffy eyes<br>Mucus in the throat (postnasal drip)<br><br><br><br>If you have severe allergies, ragweed might trigger asthma symptoms, chronic sinusitis, headaches and congestion that can interfere with sleep.<br><br>How Is It Diagnosed?<br><br>If you believe you're allergic to ragweed pollen, view a board-certified allergist. They'll ask you about your medical history, execute a physical exam and allergy testing. They could execute a skin prick test to verify your allergy.<br><br><br>For prick/scratch testing, a doctor or nurse places a tiny drop containing ragweed pollen on your skin. They'll then lightly prick or scratch your skin with a needle through the drop. If you're sensitive to ragweed, you will develop redness, swelling and itching at the test site within 15 minutes. Sometimes your doctor may take a blood test to see if you have the antibody to ragweed.<br><br>What Can I Do About It?<br><br>There's no cure for a ragweed pollen allergy. But you can find ways to take care of and manage it.<br><br><br>Track the pollen count for the area. The news headlines media often reports the count for your area, specially when pollen is high. You also could possibly get your area's pollen counts from the National Allergy Bureau.<br><br><br>Stay indoors in central air conditioning when the pollen count is high. Get yourself a CERTIFIED asthma &amp; allergy friendly&reg; air filter for the air conditioner. Should you spending some time outside, try to head out before 10 a.m. and after 3 p.m. Ragweed pollen peaks in the center of the day.<br><br><br>Prevent pollen from being tracked into your home. If you may spend lots of time outside during peak pollen time:<br><br><br>Take your shoes off outside<br>Don't wear your &ldquo;outside&rdquo; clothes to bed<br>Have a shower and shampoo your hair during the night<br><br><br><br>You might even consider moving to get away from ragweed. This can often help you're feeling better for a brief time. But you can develop allergies to plants in your brand-new location in a few years. And ragweed is within every state except Alaska. A well-thought out treatment plan is just a better way to reside with your allergies.<br><br><br>Take anti-inflammatory or antihistamine medicines, and start treatment in the summer. Many over-the-counter medicines work very well to manage pollen allergy symptoms. They are able to also help eye, nose and asthma symptoms. Many newer antihistamines don't cause just as much drowsiness as older ones.<br><br><br>Anti-inflammatory and antihistamine nose sprays also help and have few side effects. You can even find eye drops for eye symptoms. Leukotriene inhibitors can help by blocking chemicals your system releases when you yourself have an allergic reaction.<br><br><br>For long-term relief, see an allergist about immunotherapy. This sort of treatment can reduce the allergic reaction to specific allergens. You will find two types: allergy shots and sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT).<br><br><br>Allergy shots involve giving injections of allergens in a increasing dose over time. They relieve symptoms for most of us and can last for years to decades.<br><br><br>With SLIT, you take a small dose of an allergen under your tongue. In addition you gradually become more sensitive.<br><br><br>If you have allergic asthma, your Asthma Action Plan may include some of these allergy treatments to assist you keep your asthma under control.<br><br><br>With the best treatment plan, you must see major improvements in your symptoms.<br>'
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