Other Treatment
If medicines cannot control your
allergic rhinitis, you may think about having allergy
shots (immunotherapy). Allergy shots are small doses of
allergens that your doctor injects under your skin.
This helps your body "get used to" the allergen, which can result in fewer or
less severe symptoms.
Allergy shots work best if you are allergic
to pollens,
animal dander, or
dust mites. But you may need allergy shots for 3 to 5
years, and there is some risk of severe whole-body reactions (anaphylaxis).
Other treatment choices
Allergy shots
(immunotherapy)
Should I take allergy shots for allergic
rhinitis or allergic asthma?
What to think about
Although expensive, allergy
shots may not cost more than the combined cost of medicine, doctor and
emergency room visits, and missed days of school or work over several years.
But they require patience and commitment for an effective result. You may need
to take regular shots for 3 to 5 years, and it may take 1 year or more for
symptoms to improve. If the treatment schedule would be difficult for you to
follow, you may want to think about other options.
Researchers are
looking at putting the allergen under the person's tongue, rather than giving a
shot. This is used more in Europe than the United States.
Doctors
use allergy shots mainly to treat an allergy caused by one allergen or a
closely related group of them, such as grass pollens. If you are allergic to
more than one
type
of allergen, you may need to get shots for each type of allergen to
relieve all of your symptoms. The allergens can usually be combined into one or
two shots.
Because allergic rhinitis cannot be cured and may be
frustrating to treat, people may try
alternative treatment methods. But most of these
treatments either have not been studied or have not been proven to work. Such
treatments may be expensive, and some can be dangerous to your health.