Ask Doctor Dzung Price

Renew You Centre for Wellbeing & Longevity

December 21st, 2008

This is the first of a series of articles full of useful tips to help relieve your child’s allergies.

Part 1: Clear the Air In Your Home
Air quality inside many homes is often even worse than outside. The average home contains toxic fumes from gas stoves or heating, varnishes, carpeting, plastics, perfumes, air fresheners, household cleaners, disinfectants and chlorinated water, all of which can cause respiratory and nasal allergies, especially in children, whose nasal and respiratory passages are smaller and not fully matured. Mold can also cause a range of troublesome, often serious reactions, including decline in mental function, chronic flu-like symptoms, or neurological problems. Cigarette smoke increases risk of childhood asthma, sensitizes children to airborne allergens like cat dander and dust mites, and also leads to food allergies (study by Swedish Karolinska Institute published in medical journal, Thorax).
Irritants from outside such as pollen and pollutants and irritants from outside get inside the home, carried on our hair, clothing, shoes, or pets. Environmental pollutants such as traffic exhaust and pesticides used by most city councils come in through our windows and doors. Germany’s Helmholtz Research Centre for Environment and Healthpublished in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, June 15, 2008). found that children living less than 50 metres from a major road had a 50% higher risk of allergies, eczema and allergies than children living farther away (
All these irritants can be trapped inside the home, leading to higher, more harmful concentrations and poor air quality. No wonder so many children are affected!
To clear the air in your home, you can:
  • Get an air purifier (such as the HEPA filter) to filter out airborne allergens.
  • Avoid chemical cleaners, including many so-called ‘green cleaners’, and use white vinegar and baking soda instead. With a little muscle, they serve the purpose very well.  
  • Reduce dust collectors in your home – Furry toys, frills, cushions, carpeting, fancy drapery and too much clutter are dust traps. Get rid of them or keep them to minimum, especially in bedrooms. Wash curtains and bedding weekly in hot water. Dust and vaccum weekly (being careful not to stir up dust).
  • Get a chlorine filter on showerhead or bath taps. When heated, chlorine releases toxic fumes, and easily enters through the skin.
  • Filter pollutants from heavy nearby traffic with a high hedge of low-allergen shrubs or lots of trees.
  • Leave outer clothing and shoes outside the door when entering the house, and wipe down pets before they enter, especially in pollen season.
  • Don’t use plastics, kitchenware, toys, or furnishings that have a noticeable smell. The smell means the item is releasing fumes, carrying chemical molecules into the air where your family breathes them in.

In part 2, you get practical tips to detoxify your child and your child’s environment. Toxins are a major cause of allergies and other diseases.

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend
April 5th, 2008

If your child always seems to have a blocked nose, he or she probably has an allergy or allergic condition called allergic rhinitis – and allergy relief is available. Not being able to breathe freely is bad enough, but there are other reasons to take chronic stuffy nose seriously – such as allergy.

Allergic Rhinitis is a condition where the mucous membranes of the nasal passage are inflamed, and produce a clear discharge. If your child only experiences this seasonally, it is called hay fever. If the condition is persistent, your child probably has chronic of perennial allergic rhinits. What causes the inflammation is histamine, a chemical released along with other inflammatory substances during an allergic reaction. It’s these chemical that cause the typical symptoms: runny nose, sneezing, swollen tissues, watery eyes, congested ears and throat.

Your child’s rhinitis can be triggered by any airborne allergens, such as pollen and mould spores, fungus and its spores, smoke, dust mites, animal dander, air pollution, and perfumes. These irritate the mucous lining of the upper airways, which stimulate the production of excessive mucus. If there is too much mucus, your child can’t clear his nasal passages, and you get congestion. Because of their smaller noses, small children can find stuffy noses particularly upsetting and difficult to cope with.

Aside from the distressing cold-like symptoms, allergic rhinitis can cause sore throats if your child has to breathe mostly through the mouth, which dries the throat tissues. Your child is also at greater risk of tooth decay, for the saliva that normally helps protect the teeth is not able to do its work when your child breathes through the mouth. Also, the sense of smell and taste are affected, so your child may have a poor appetite, and may become deficient in nutrients. Good nutrition is especially critical for growing children.

Another troublesome effect of this allergy is the child who always eats with mouth open because she cannot breathe through her nose. Children in this situation can be subject to unfair scolding or teasing, though they have no option but to breathe through their mouths.

Rhinitis Brings the Risk of Other Allergic Conditions

Children with allergic rhinitis also have other inflammatory allergic conditions or are at high risk of developing them. The chronic inflammation of mucous membranes in allergic rhinitis is part of a widespread pattern of mucosal inflammation that affects different parts of the child’s body. Inflammation of the bronchial tubes and gastro-intestinal tract is often part of this pattern. Therefore, your child’s allergic rhinitis indicates a higher risk of asthma. In fact, rhinitis and asthma are found together in many allergic children, and the rhinitis tends to aggravate the bronchial inflammation of asthma. Children with rhinitis and asthma also commonly suffer from otitis media (inflammation of the middle ear, often called ‘glue ear’). Otitis is the major cause of deafness in children.

What Causes the Stuffiness in the First Place?

Your child’s nose and throat filter the air to remove any particles that can damage the lungs. The respiratory organs are lined with mucus and millions of tiny hair-like projections that move foreign particles to the throat where the child can cough them out or swallow them so they can be eliminated or destroyed. The function of mucus is to trap irritants before they get into the lungs so they can be removed. This requires a moist internal environment.

If the air is dry or your child’s body is dehydrated (which is more common than you might think), the mucus can dry out the mucus so that it is no longer able to protect against airborne particles. Because there is not enough mucus, irritants can then come into contact with the membrane, irritating it and causing inflammation. This weakens the membrane so that particles can pass through it into the body’s fluids. The immune system may over-react to these particles, leading to the development of allergy. Other factors that can contribute to damage of the mucous membranes are poor diet, environmental toxins, and oxidative stress.

How You Can Help Your Child

Various natural remedies can be used to improve allergic rhinitis, including homeopathic remedies, acupuncture, acupressure, and nasal irrigation.

Nasal irrigation – You can relieve the swelling and congestion of rhinitis by flushing out your child’s nasal passage with warm salt water (sea salt). It has been shown to quickly reduce levels of histamine (the chemical causing the swelling) and remove excess mucus.  Use the treatment morning and night, or as needed. Bathing in the sea in warm weather is also helpful.

To flush out your child’s nasal passage, dissolve about 1-2 teaspoons salt per quart of warm water, and use a bulb or large syringe to squirt the water towards the back (not the top) of your child’s head. You can add a teaspoon of baking soda to the solution, also. Your child should try to avoid swallowing the solution, though it is safe to do so.

Vapour inhalation – This is another traditional remedy that has been shown very effective in reducing congestion and histamine levels. It’s suitable for older children. Sit your child with head over a bowl of steaming water with a towel over his or her head. Otherwise, use a vaporiser.

Acupuncture – Acupuncture is particularly effective in reducing symptoms of rhinitis, and in desensitizing people to allergens.

Acupressure – To relieve nasal congestion, tell your child to press on the groove where each nostril meets the cheek, increasing the upwards pressure for a few moments. It’s worthwhile teaching your child this technique, as it also relieves sinus headache.  With small children, gently but firmly apply the pressure yourself.

For more permanent solutions for allergic rhinitis and another allergy relief, contact the NewLife Wellbeing Centre in Robina or the Renew You Clinic in Brisbane at 07 5562 1501 or 07 3366 8955.

 

Article – allergy relief, Brisbane’s Child

For information, contact: Tosca Zraikat
Phone: 07 5562 1501
Email: tzraikat@yahoo.com.au

What’s the Big Deal about A Stuffy Nose?

 

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend