
Quand la saison des allergies au pollen commence-t-elle au Royaume-Uni - et comment éviter les symptômes ?
Revu par Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGPAuthored by Dr Sarah Jarvis MBE, FRCGPPublié à l'origine 6 May 2019
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Pour une personne sur cinq, l'arrivée du printemps ou de l'été après les longs mois d'hiver froids est une bénédiction mitigée — et une poudre microscopique en est responsable. La rhinite allergique est causée par une allergie au pollen produit par l'herbe (d'où le « foin » dans rhinite allergique) ou parfois par les arbres ou les mauvaises herbes.
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Video picks for Rhume des foins
If you suffer from rhume des foins, your immune system goes into overdrive when exposed to pollen, and the result is a sneezy and sometimes wheezy mix of misery. Fortunately, simple measures can control symptoms in most people.
The medical name for hay fever is seasonal allergic rhinitis: seasonal because it tends to happen for the same few months every year; and rhinitis for inflammation (‘-itis’) of the nose. In fact, though, hay fever often affects your eyes and throat as well.
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When does hay fever season reach its peak?
Most people with hay fever are allergic to grass pollen, and peak times are May to July. Some are allergic to tree pollen (at its peak in March to May); others to weed pollen (highest in July to September); and really unlucky people react to all three.
The delicate lining of the nose and eyes has cells designed to fight off invaders into the body, like germs. In hay fever, they respond to contact with pollen by releasing chemicals, including histamines. Sometimes the same chemicals, which cause inflammation and irritation, can be released by cells at the back of the throat or the sinuses.
The result is sneezing, blocked or runny nose, itching and watering eyes. Less commonly, it can lead to récurrents, loss of smell and pain over the sinuses behind the forehead or the cheekbones. Hay fever is an 'atopic' condition, meaning it affects people who have a tendency to allergies. Other atopic conditions include eczéma et asthme. Having one of these conditions increases your risk of others, and severe hay fever can trigger asthma symptoms. Some people only get asthma during hay fever season.
How to beat hay fever
Retour au sommaireAvoiding pollen where possible can make a huge difference to symptoms. Weather reports often carry details of the next day's pollen count - you may want to stay indoors when it's high with the windows closed. Remember, it's grass you mostly want to avoid if you suffer in summer. Fields of bright yellow rapeseed oil are often blamed for hay fever - but rape pollen is too heavy to float easily and rarely a culprit.
If you are out and about, you can still cut your exposure to pollen. A simple barrier nasal balm under your nostrils works by trapping pollen. Surprisingly, it can relieve eye as well as nose symptoms. Try Vaseline or Haymax nasal balm. A pollen filter for your car needn't cost a fortune, and can prevent misery on long journeys - if you have one, have it serviced before hay fever season.
When you get home after being outside, change your outer clothes, as pollen may have stuck to them. And ideally wash your hair so you don't take pollen to bed with you. Speaking of bed, forget those visions of clean washing blowing gently in a summer breeze on the washing line. All clothes, and especially sheets, should be dried indoors away from pollen.
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Should you reach for the antihistamines?
Retour au sommaireThere are lots of effective medications for hay fever, depending on your symptoms. Comprimés antihistaminiques stop the release of histamine, responsible for all that itching and watering. These days, newer non-drowsy versions are available without prescription from your pharmacist.
However, antihistamines don't tend to clear a blocked nose. For that, you need a nasal spray, usually containing a tiny dose of steroid. As for eyes, regular eye drops containing a medicine that stops immune cells releasing histamine should help. Both of these need to be taken regularly for full effect. It may be worth starting these a couple of weeks before your hay fever symptoms usually kick in, as they can take a few days to have full effect.
In very severe cases, immunotherapy (exposing you to tiny amounts of pollen so your body gets used to it) may be recommended. It's not a quick fix - you may need treatment for three seasons for full relief, but the benefits do persist for at least two years after you stop.
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Pour 1 personne sur 4, le temps plus chaud marque le début d'une lutte annuelle contre le rhume des foins. L'injection de Kenalog pour le rhume des foins a auparavant apporté un soulagement à de nombreuses personnes au Royaume-Uni, mais les risques potentiels de cette injection ont conduit le NHS à arrêter de la prescrire. Les préoccupations concernant les effets secondaires ont même incité le gouvernement britannique à interdire les publicités sur les réseaux sociaux - bien que certaines entreprises continuent de violer cette loi. Nous examinons les préoccupations de sécurité liées à l'obtention de la vaccination contre le rhume des foins ailleurs.
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If you get hay fever, you probably don’t need reminding when pollen levels are high. You can feel it. The scratchy throat on the morning commute. The streaming eyes halfway through a meeting. The sudden need to check whether you packed antihistamines before leaving the house. Pollen levels shift quickly. They change with the weather, the season and where you are in the country. A warm, dry, breezy day in one region can mean something very different in another. That’s why we’ve created the Patient.info pollen map – to give you a clearer picture of what’s happening where you live. Open in a new window
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About the author

Dr Sarah Jarvis MBE, FRCGP
Clinical Consultant
MA (Cantab), BM, BCh (Oxon), DRCOG, FRCGP, MBE
After training in medicine at Cambridge and Oxford, Dr Sarah Jarvis MBE became a GP.
About the reviewerView full bio

Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP
Médecin généraliste, Auteur médical
MBBS, MRCGP, MRCP (Paediatrics), DCH
Dr Colin Tidy is an NHS Doctor, based in Oxfordshire.
Historique de l'article
Les informations sur cette page sont examinées par des cliniciens qualifiés.
6 May 2019 | Publié à l'origine
Écrit par :
Dr Sarah Jarvis MBE, FRCGPRevu par
Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP

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