How To Determine If You Have Allergies?-Allergy Symptoms
Allergy is a term broadly used in describing a reaction of body tissues that is unusual to a substance that has no distinctive or noticeable effect on other humans. According to studies, about 17 out of every 100 Americans are allergic, or hypersensitive, to some substances which are known to cause unusual reactions.
These substances, more known as allergens, range from various irritants, such as pollens, mold spores, insect venoms, animal dander, and house dust. There are some who are allergic to substances in soap. Some react differently to the smell of a flower.
Below are the most common types of allergies.
- Food Allergies – ignited by certain food types
- Anaphylaxis – triggered by drugs, food, or insect stings
- Respiratory Allergies – triggered by allergens which are airborn
- Contact Allergies – triggered by skin-affecting allergens
- Insect Sting Allergies – triggered by insect venom
Here are mild as well as severe symptoms that are associated with these common types of allergy.
Since each person may have unique reactions from these allergies, your symptoms might vary or may have some or all of the listed reactions. Consult your doctor if the symptoms have become persistent or severe.
Food Allergies
Symptoms of an allergy caused by certain food types usually happen within some minutes after you ingested food allergens, although there are some that would only occur after several hours. The symptoms may only happen to areas around the lips, mouth, and digestive tract, or could also involve other body areas. Foods that commonly result to allergic reactions are eggs, nuts, milk, fish, soy, shellfish, and wheat.
Mild Symptoms:
- Tingling, itching, or swelling of your mouth, tongue, lips, or throat
- Tightness feeling in your throat
- Difficulty speaking or swallowing
- Nausea
- Indigestion and abdominal cramps
- Vomiting and diarrhea
- Skin rashes
- Coughing, congestion, wheezing, or sneezing
- Runny, stuffy, or itchy nose
Severe Symptoms:
- Breathing difficulties
- Sweating, dizziness, and faintness
- Rapid or sudden heart rate increase
- Sudden inability or hoarseness to speak
- Extreme and sudden facial itching and swelling
- Anaphylaxis
Anaphylaxis
Anaphylaxis is a severe, sudden, and potentially fatal reaction that has symptoms affecting various body areas. Symptoms commonly manifest very quickly after some exposure to allergens and may include extreme itching all over your body, total swelling of the body, respiratory distress, swelling, and may cause shock that is life endangering. Anaphylaxis requires urgent medical attention. The reaction is most commonly a result of drug, insect sting, or food allergies.
Symptoms include:
- Skin flushing
- Itching or tingling around your body
- Mouth swelling as well as in the throat area
- Difficulty breathing and swallowing
- Tightening of your chest
- Agitation, confusion, or lightheadedness
- Nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, or diarrhea
- Irregular heartbeat
In some severe cases shock might occur. The swelling of your body’s bronchial tissues might cause you to choke before losing consciousness. An abrupt drop in your blood pressure as a result of dilated blood vessels might also cause you to lose consciousness.
In cases that cause anaphylactic shock, it is necessary that you get treatment immediately. Without prompt medical attention, anaphylactic shock might prove fatal.
Respiratory Allergies
Symptoms of respiratory allergies frequently occur after a few hours of exposure and usually trigged by allergens that are airborne like animal dander, plant pollens, mold spores, and dust mites.
Mild Symptoms:
- Wheezing or coughing
- Sneezing
- Itchy throat or nose
- Postnasal drip
- Smell sense is impaired
- Hoarseness in the throat
- Congestion
- Red, itchy, swollen, or watery eyes
- Clogged or runny nose with thin and clear mucus
- Conjunctivitis
- Fatigue
Severe Symptoms:
- Shortness and difficulty in breathing
- Chest tightness and pain
Contact Allergies:
Symptoms that occur as a result of contact allergies usually happen within a few minutes after your allergen exposure, although there are symptoms that may occur after several hours. Common allergens are poison ivy and poison oak, rubber, nickel, latex, preservatives, dyes, fragrances, medications, and cosmetics like perfume and hair dye. Nickel, a metal frequently used in buttons, jewelry, hairpins, zippers, metal clips and snaps, is the frequent source of the allergy. Sun exposure might also give you reactions.
Mild Symptoms:
- A bumpy or itchy rash
- Fluid-filled bumps on your skin
- Swelling or redness of your skin
- Hives
- Eczema
Severe Symptoms:
- Anaphylaxis
Insect Sting Allergies
Symptoms caused by insect sting allergies usually happen after a few minutes after you got stung, although there may be symptoms happening after some hours. Insect venoms cause these allergic reactions, like those from wasps, bees, hornets, fire ants, and yellow jackets.
Gaetane Ross
http://www.articlesbase.com/non-fiction-articles/how-to-determine-if-you-have-allergiesallergy-symptoms-120793.html
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Tagged with: Abdominal Cramps • Allergy Symptoms • Animal Dander • Body Areas • Body Tissues • Food Allergens • Food Allergies • Food Types • Insect Sting Allergies • Insect Stings • Insect Venom • Itchy Nose • Mild Symptoms • Mold Spores • Mouth Tongue • Noticeable Effect • Respiratory Allergies • Throat Tightness • Types Of Allergies • Vomiting And Diarrhea
Weird Allergy doctor?
I went to see an allergy specialist not because I really wanted but because my new doctor recommended me to. I had already seen an allergist for my symptoms and it was determined my allergies are non existant or very subtle but because I have food allergy symptoms, the doctor said to see this specialist.
Now the funny thing is that I had no allergy symptom when I went to see him but now I have some. After my testing was done by the nurse, the doctor kept telling me I had allergies and that we can do nothing about the food but avoid but that I could take the shots for other allergies. I told him I don’t have much but then, he said let me try some more tests because we haven’t tried all of them because of the food allergies you wanted. And he injected something into my arm to show me I could have a reaction. At that point, I thought he is just trying whatever will give me a positive reaction but I didn’t worry.
Now, I am worried. I didn’t say anything because I usually trust doctors but what if this one was crazy? Only after, I realized that his testing should have been the skin scratch and not an injected product.
What should I do?
I am ready to file a complaint and where should I start? I hope that the thing he injected will go away soon and that I will stop sneezing. But I want him to be followed maybe he is doing that to many patients. Now, I didn’t know before but I realized after that he has an allergy clinic where people come get their allergy shots. He is basically in business tryting to sell as much as he can.
I am sneezing more and my eyes are burning a little bit. I had these symptoms some time in the past but I trust the different tests I had and also I learned that my symptoms could have been due low carbone monoxyde inhalation or molds. Not everything that makes us sneeze is due to trees and grass.
The Allergy doctor is not weird. He did all the professional things, right.
Do you really believe that your symptoms could be due to "low carbone monoxyde?" Is this a new compound from outer space?
Go and file a complain against the doctor. Write to the State’s Medical Board and they will send you a complaint form.
I feel that you are ill informed, lack basic education and are weird. However, you may be the smartest person alive.
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