Acupuncture May Help With Nasal Allergies, Doctors Say
If you've got a stuffy, drippy or
itchy nose from allergies, figuring out which remedies help best can be tough.
New guidelines from the Academy of
Otolaryngology should make it easier for people and their doctors to choose the
treatments that will help the most, from over-the-counter remedies like
antihistamines to more serious interventions like allergy shots and even
surgery.
And because allergic rhinitis
affects 1 in 6 Americans, that's a lot of stuffy drippy misery potentially
avoided.
We talked with Dr. Sandra Lin, an associate professor of
otolaryngology at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and a guideline author,
to find out what's new. Here goes:
- Sublingual immunotherapy for grass allergies lets people with those allergies get the benefits of allergy shots without the shots. It was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2014.
- Surgery is an option for people with persistent symptoms and obstructed nasal passages. But other, less invasive treatments should be tried first.
- Acupuncture may help relieve symptoms and improve quality of life for people with perennial allergic rhinitis, and may help with seasonal allergies. too, according to several studies. Thus it could be an option for people looking for nonpharmaceutical treatments.
- There's not enough evidence that traditional Chinese herbal remedies help, largely because there are so many different remedies and very little testing for safety and effectiveness.
The recommendation of acupuncture
seems surprising, but Lin says, "I'm telling you there is some evidence
base for it."
That and the question of traditional
herbal remedies made for a lot of discussion "in a good way," Lin
adds. The committee included not just ENTs but primary care doctors and
patients.
The guidelines also provide a road
map for treating allergic rhinitis, with over-the-counter medications and
managing the environment as the first line of defense.
"There's so much available over
the counter," Lin notes. But because there are so many options, it can be
hard to match the drug with the symptoms, she says.
Antihistamines don't help for stuffiness,
for instance, but they do help with sneezing and itch. Decongestants are good
for stuffiness and drippy noses. One steroid nasal spray, triamcinolone
(Nasacort), is now available over the counter. That and prescription steroid nasal sprays are good for treating
stuffiness and mucus.
"One of the things I think is
useful is to see your primary care physician and let them look at you so they
can make the decision if you have environmental allergies," Lin says.
"Sometimes what people think are allergies are not allergies."
If you're still having trouble after
that, then it might be time to go to a specialist for allergy testing and
discussion of other options, she says.
The source of the report is here.
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