An allergy is a sensitivity to a substance that does not usualy cause people any discomfort or harm. Hay fever, which is caused by a sensitivity to pollen, is a well known example. Asthma, eczema, rashes and a variety of other complaints can be caused partly or entirely by an allergy. In fact, allergies can affect almost any part of the body and be caused by a vast range of natural and artificial substances.
Allergies are a reaction to allergens, a name given to those substance such as pollen that spark off symptoms of an allergy in someone who is sensitive to it.
An allergy is everything from a runny nose, itchy eyes and palate to skin rash. It aggravates the sense of smell, sight, tastes and touch causing irritation, extreme disability and sometimes fatality. It occurs when the body’s immune system overreacts to normally harmless substances.
Allergy is widespread and affects approximately one in four of the population in the UK at some time in their lives. Each year the numbers are increasing by 5% with as many as half of all sufferers being children.
Symptoms
Symptoms of an allergy tend to show up in/on the parts of the body that are exposed to the allergen. An airborne allergen like pollen, makes it severest impact in the eyes, nose and air passages.
Skin allergies
There are three basic forms of allergic reaction affecting the skin. The most common especially among children is eczema. Dermatitis is a particular type of eczema affecting adults. This is caused by direct skin contact with certain allergens.
Eye and ear allergies
Allergic reactions can also affect the eyes. Theses generally show up as irritation and redness in the white of the eye. Severe swellings can occur but, but more often then not the symptoms are watering and soreness.
The ears are also often affected by allergens, when this happens the fluid will build up inside the ear and may temporarily affected your hearing.
Nasal allergies
Hay fever can affect the eyes and ears though the its principal target is the nose, which becomes stuffy, runny or sneezy.
Some people suffer from symptoms which are similar to those of hay fever, and will suffer with them all year round. They may have a stuffy, runny nose virtually all the time, although it will often be worse indoors, particularly at night and early morning. This condition is called Perennial rhinitis and can be the result of an to the common house dust mite.
Food allergies and food intolerance
These have a wide variety of symptoms. The most obvious symptoms of an acute food allergy are a stomach upset followed quickly by nausea, vomiting or diarrhoea. People who are acutely sensitive to a food may also get a swollen tongue and lips. Sometimes the suffer gets 2 kinds of symptoms; for instance a child who is allergic to cow`s milk may get diarrhoea and a skin rash. Apart from skin rashes, which may appear hours or even days later after eating the food these symptoms become apparent almost imediatley after eating, usually within an hour. This makes it quite easy for the sufferer to identify the allergen.
Recurrent tummy pains and hyperactivity in children have been attributed to food allergies.
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