New drug for patients with weather allergies
Until now, most allergy medicines, especially weather allergies, often only help relieve the uncomfortable symptoms of a person like nasal itching and tearing , but a new drug appears in Canada. believed by doctors to cure this persistent disease.
Ottawa's Dr Susan Waserman, an allergy specialist at McMaster University in Hamilton, said allergy medication Oralair is a sublingual tablet, which helps the human immune system learn. How to "tolerate" allergens. Waserman believes this new Canadian licensed drug is a revolutionary allergy medicine.
Weather allergy medicine. (Photo: stallergenes)
Some studies show that allergic patients may stop taking this lozenges after 3 years, when their immune system has been taught to react appropriately to allergens. Oralair extract contains a variety of grasses, which can reprogram the immune system, enabling patients to stop taking the drug, while still reducing allergy symptoms.
According to the instructions, patients with pollen allergy should start using Oralair 4 months before the pollen season begins, usually in January every year and continue to take medication daily until the end of the pollen season, usually in July.
Weather allergies are quite common in Canada, with about 20% of the population of this country (about 8 million people) get sick every year. The number of patients in the US is about 60 million. However, Oralair is not licensed for use in the United States.
- The truth is less known about allergies
- Skin diseases in the cold season are easy to relapse
- Tragedy of those who suffer from the 5 most strange allergies on the planet
- The cause of hives is not well known
- How to deal with facial allergies
- Kinds of strange allergies
- Young food allergies are prone to asthma
- Prevention of inflammation and allergies in the eyes
- 4 patients sharing a room will increase the chance of infection for each other by 20%
- Prexige anti-inflammatory drug is withdrawn
- How to cure foot and mouth disease in the cold, cold and cold winter
- Preventing food allergies in children