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Showing posts from November, 2024

Can't Stop Coughing at Night? Here's What To Do

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stop sneezing :: Article Creator Why Can't I Stop Sneezing? The Science Behind Sneezes, And How To Stop Sneezing If you suffer from sneezing fits, identify and avoid triggers like allergens, spicy food, or bright light. Building your immune system and sipping chamomile tea may help reduce sneezing. To prevent a sneeze before it happens, try using nasal spray or blowing your nose. Thanks for signing up! Access your favorite topics in a personalized feed while you're on the go. Download the app By clicking "Sign Up", you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. You can opt-out at any time by visiting our Preferences page or by clicking "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the email. Sneezing is a normal biological response that happens when the mucus membranes in the nose are irritated. This is usually due to triggers like allergies or spicy food, or illnesses like the common cold...

How to Tell if Allergies Are Causing Your Dry Cough, According to a Doctor

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milk protein lactose intolerance :: Article Creator White Lightning: Inside Alabama's Raw Milk "secret Society" Just walking into any old grocery store, Alabama citizens are unlikely to find unpasteurized milk on the shelf next to the whole milk and the 2 percent reduced fat. But if they look hard enough, there's plenty of this "raw milk" to be found—for "pet consumption only," of course. Under Alabama law it is illegal to sell raw milk for human consumption, but local farms can skirt that restriction by labeling the product as strictly for pets. And there's a market for it. "Alabama Raw Milk," a private Facebook group started just a year ago by dairy farmer Kelly Porter, has 5.5 thousand members looking to buy or sell raw milk. While health experts warn that unpasteurized milk opens up consumers to the risk of numerous pathogens, raw milk supporters argue that foregoing the pasteurization pr...

Tickle in Your Throat? Relief Is on the Way

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athletic asthma :: Article Creator Are Asthma-like Symptoms In Elite Athletes Associated With Classical Features Of Asthma? Background: Asthma is frequent in elite athletes and clinical studies in athletes have found increased airway inflammation. Objective: To investigate asthma-like symptoms, airway inflammation, airway reactivity (AR) to mannitol and use of asthma medication in Danish elite athletes. Methods: The study group consisted of 54 elite athletes (19 with doctor-diagnosed asthma), 22 non-athletes with doctor-diagnosed asthma (steroid naive for 4 weeks before the examination) and 35 non-athletes without asthma; all aged 18–35 years. Examinations (1 day): questionnaires, exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) in parts per billion, spirometry, skin prick test, AR to mannitol and blood samples. Induced sputum was done in subjects with asthma. Results: No significant difference was found in values for eNO, AR and atopy between 42 elite athletes w...

Here's Why Your Kid Is Always Coughing

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jackfruit latex allergy :: Article Creator

Meat Allergy - ACAAI Patient

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rhubarb allergy :: Article Creator

Tickle in Your Throat? Relief Is on the Way

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birch tree allergy food list :: Article Creator Have Hay Fever? Look Out For Allergies To These Foods Allergies to the pollen of trees and plants are common. But sometimes those allergies can progress and cause a reaction to eating particular raw fruits, vegetables, nuts and legumes. As the days get longer, the grass starts growing and blossom appears on trees, it's easy to be filled with the joys of spring. But for some, it's also when the all-too-familiar itchy eyes and runny nose returns. Hay fever is back – and just the sound of a nearby lawnmower is enough to bring on a sneeze or two. Just to add to their frustrations, hay fever sufferers may find they develop surprising food allergies alongside their sniffles. Pollen food syndrome (also known as oral allergy syndrome) is perhaps more common than you'd think. While 20 percent of the UK are reported to be affected by hay fever at some point in their life, two percent of the UK ...

How to Tell if Allergies Are Causing Your Dry Cough, According to a Doctor

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sports asthma :: Article Creator

Can't Stop Coughing at Night? Here's What To Do

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stop sneezing :: Article Creator Why Can't I Stop Sneezing? The Science Behind Sneezes, And How To Stop Sneezing If you suffer from sneezing fits, identify and avoid triggers like allergens, spicy food, or bright light. Building your immune system and sipping chamomile tea may help reduce sneezing. To prevent a sneeze before it happens, try using nasal spray or blowing your nose. Thanks for signing up! Access your favorite topics in a personalized feed while you're on the go. Download the app By clicking "Sign Up", you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. You can opt-out at any time by visiting our Preferences page or by clicking "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the email. Sneezing is a normal biological response that happens when the mucus membranes in the nose are irritated. This is usually due to triggers like allergies or spicy food, or illnesses like the common cold...

Here's Why Your Kid Is Always Coughing

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allergy to latex foods :: Article Creator Latex Allergy: 'A Balloon Could Kill Me' Liz Knight can no longer read a newspaper or touch the buttons on her remote controls, because they both contain latex Balloons are a common sight at children's birthdays, weddings, restaurants and shops. But Liz Knight has spent most of her life avoiding them because coming into contact with one could kill her. As a child, Liz was allergic to dust, animal hair and feathers. By the age of 12, doctors found she was also allergic to human hair. Her long blonde ponytail was duly cut off into a short, cropped style that wouldn't cause any irritation. It didn't stop there - the extent of her allergies only grew and some of her earliest memories involve being isolated because of them. "We went to visit a relative when I was four; I think it was an aunt or a great-aunt of mine. She had a budgie - everyone seemed to have them...