Not sure if this is the right section.. HAYFEVER

Not sure if this is the right section.. HAYFEVER

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Monkey news

Original Poster:

1,071 posts

182 months

Monday 9th August 2010
quotequote all
Hey chaps,

I have over the past 3 years started to suffer from hayfever and this year is the worst. The start of the summer is always fine for me, but it is the middle July till September when I suffer really badly.

Now I hear you say, "why don't you take hayfever tablets?".. Well I did that, but my stomach was really not happy with this and I spent many an hour on the throne. I have tried all the hayfever tablets in boots, all of which upset my stomach. Now it is too much, constantly sneezing and feeling really rough. What can I do about this? I don't mind tablets which will make me feel drousey, as that is much better than hayfever symptoms. Plus coffee always helps the drouseyness

Thanks for your advice,

Vinny

Paul Dishman

4,715 posts

238 months

Monday 9th August 2010
quotequote all
Go and see your local pharmacist (preferably independent not Boots or Lloyds or supermarket) and ask for a beclomethasone nasal spray and some sodium cromoglycate eye drops.

Squirt the spray twice in each nostril every morning and night
Put a drop in each eye four times day

Do the above every day without fail until the end of September. This is the key to sucess- many many people give up/ can't be arsed after a few days and come back complaining that the drugs haven't worked!

Ignore any advice about taking honey or anything homeopathic....

You've been very unlucky with oral antihistamines, most people can take them without problems

King Herald

23,501 posts

217 months

Monday 9th August 2010
quotequote all
I use Beconase nose spray morning and night, from the start of summer, before hay fever kicks in, until the end.

I also take Boots home brand Loritadine hayfever tabs, every morning without fail, again, from before the first sneeze of the season, until the end. Unfortunatly you can't use that part of the deal.

I also get hay fever related asthma, but the brown inhaler, every morning, from before the start of... You get the picture. biggrin

This regime has worked for me for the last five years or so. I just wish I'd known this secret 30 years ago, my life would have been so much different.

Anyway, we've now left the UK, to live in the Philippines, where they also have their own brand of hay fever.....

Scraggles

7,619 posts

225 months

Monday 9th August 2010
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Paul Dishman said:
Ignore any advice about taking honey or anything homeopathic
bullst !

Find your local beekeeper, ask them for honey cappings

eg
http://www.paynesbeefarm.co.uk/store/Honey-Combs-p... costs more than honey....

Eat a spoon of this during the winter period, helps to desensitise you to the pollen, or you can try Paul's advice and get drugged up on the happy pills smile

RussellG

630 posts

186 months

Monday 9th August 2010
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I have suffered mild hayfever for years and normally take the usual antihistamines pills which often help but dont get rid off the problem completely. This year on the advice of a friend I decided to try the light therapy gadgets. I wasnt convinced it would help but must admit I felt like it made a noticeable difference within a few day. So much so that I now only take pills for hayfever on really bad days.


http://www.lloydspharmacy.com/webapp/wcs/stores/se...

Gusanita

365 posts

191 months

Monday 9th August 2010
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Start taking vitamin c, it's a natural antihistamine.

SB10

558 posts

167 months

Tuesday 10th August 2010
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My hayfever was really bad when i was younger, however the last 2/3 years i've been fine... that was until June this year! The worst i've ever been!

a friend of mine recommended one of thosee electronic allergy reliever things you get from Lloyds pharmacy (about 10 quid). It actually works! smile


Paul Dishman

4,715 posts

238 months

Tuesday 10th August 2010
quotequote all
Scraggles said:
Paul Dishman said:
Ignore any advice about taking honey or anything homeopathic
bullst !

Find your local beekeeper, ask them for honey cappings

eg
http://www.paynesbeefarm.co.uk/store/Honey-Combs-p... costs more than honey....

Eat a spoon of this during the winter period, helps to desensitise you to the pollen, or you can try Paul's advice and get drugged up on the happy pills smile
There's no reliable scientific evidence that honey works, there's plenty of evidence that the therapy I've quoted works and there aren't any happy pills involved!

Paul Dishman

4,715 posts

238 months

Tuesday 10th August 2010
quotequote all
Gusanita said:
Start taking vitamin c, it's a natural antihistamine.
Don't bother

jshell

11,039 posts

206 months

Tuesday 10th August 2010
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King Herald said:
I use Beconase nose spray morning and night,..
I used that for 2 years and my hay fever completely cleared up! It was the 'Aqueous Solution' in the glass bottle/squirter.

Scraggles

7,619 posts

225 months

Tuesday 10th August 2010
quotequote all
Paul Dishman said:
There's no reliable scientific evidence that honey works, there's plenty of evidence that the therapy I've quoted works and there aren't any happy pills involved!
honey and honey cappings are different, if you had read the link you might have worked it out

honey is filtered free of pollen, propolis etc

honey cappings is about half honey and the rest pollen, bits of wax, propolis etc

Tried it every day during the winter and only took pills when away for a long week in the middle of a dry spell, in any case did not need to the pills, but good to have them along, they used to make me happy by stopping the hayfever....

Suggestion is to try the spoonful of honey cappings over winter and if it does not work, no big loss

not having any itching, sniffly nose etc during the summer is really nice as had to sometimes double up on the dosage to make them work

Mobile Chicane

20,844 posts

213 months

Tuesday 10th August 2010
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Sudafed tablets (Pseudoephedrine hydrochloride - pharmacy only). These are more effective than antihistamines, don't cause drowsiness, and are about a 1/4 of the price.

Paul Dishman

4,715 posts

238 months

Wednesday 11th August 2010
quotequote all
Scraggles said:
Paul Dishman said:
There's no reliable scientific evidence that honey works, there's plenty of evidence that the therapy I've quoted works and there aren't any happy pills involved!
honey and honey cappings are different, if you had read the link you might have worked it out

honey is filtered free of pollen, propolis etc

honey cappings is about half honey and the rest pollen, bits of wax, propolis etc

Tried it every day during the winter and only took pills when away for a long week in the middle of a dry spell, in any case did not need to the pills, but good to have them along, they used to make me happy by stopping the hayfever....

Suggestion is to try the spoonful of honey cappings over winter and if it does not work, no big loss

not having any itching, sniffly nose etc during the summer is really nice as had to sometimes double up on the dosage to make them work
I'm glad it works for you, but a clinical trial failed to show any benefit for honey

Paul Dishman

4,715 posts

238 months

Wednesday 11th August 2010
quotequote all
Mobile Chicane said:
Sudafed tablets (Pseudoephedrine hydrochloride - pharmacy only). These are more effective than antihistamines, don't cause drowsiness, and are about a 1/4 of the price.
These will dry up excess nasal secretions and can be useful for short term use only. You wouldn't want to be taking pseudoephedrine every day though.

Scraggles

7,619 posts

225 months

Wednesday 11th August 2010
quotequote all
paul

honey and honey cappings are different, did you not check out the links or any info I gave u for fukcs sake ?

yes a trial with filtered honey is probably not going to do a lot, the honey cappings is not a pure substance and cant easily be quantified as one spoon will be different to the next

clinical trilas love to have pure and easily repliacted stuff to work with

cappings will never be that

good luck to a reliance on drugs, whilst still having itchy eyes in the evening, somehting i no longer suffer with

Anthony Micallef

1,122 posts

196 months

Wednesday 11th August 2010
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Ive suffured from Hayfever for as long as I can remember. Moved up North from London and it became worse due to all the farms that I lived near. My normal medication (Cetrizine and Beconaze) werent as effective anymore. So I got my Dr to refer my to an imunology clinic for disensitisation injections. These have helped but I still get symptons although its not meant to be a cure anyway.

Dont bother with Lotradine as Ive been told by a Professor of Imunology that its so weak they use it as a placebo!

PintOfKittens

1,336 posts

191 months

Thursday 12th August 2010
quotequote all
Paul Dishman said:
Mobile Chicane said:
Sudafed tablets (Pseudoephedrine hydrochloride - pharmacy only). These are more effective than antihistamines, don't cause drowsiness, and are about a 1/4 of the price.
These will dry up excess nasal secretions and can be useful for short term use only. You wouldn't want to be taking pseudoephedrine every day though.
Im on sudafed every day for the last 3 months, in addition to Ceterizine and Montelukast. Works perfectly

King Herald

23,501 posts

217 months

Thursday 12th August 2010
quotequote all
Anthony Micallef said:
Ive suffured from Hayfever for as long as I can remember. Moved up North from London and it became worse due to all the farms that I lived near. My normal medication (Cetrizine and Beconaze) werent as effective anymore. So I got my Dr to refer my to an imunology clinic for disensitisation injections. These have helped but I still get symptons although its not meant to be a cure anyway.

Dont bother with Lotradine as Ive been told by a Professor of Imunology that its so weak they use it as a placebo!
Lotradine? or Loritadine? I used it for several years, and once I started using it properly I was hay fever free for almost every summer of the last five years.

Mind you, I was also snorting Beconase twice a day, which may or may not have been the active ingredient in my cure. scratchchin

Anthony Micallef

1,122 posts

196 months

Thursday 12th August 2010
quotequote all
Sorry I meant loratadine, I found Beconase to be very good so it may have been that that helped for you.

SXi Lad

2,964 posts

190 months

Thursday 12th August 2010
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Get HayMax! Highly recommend it.

http://www.haybalm.f2s.com/

Edited by SXi Lad on Thursday 12th August 18:41