Thursday 21 August 2008

Study: Stress & Anxiety Make Your Allergies Worse

�If you're one of the millions of Americans who suffer from allergies,* this story is for you. Scientists have determined that when it comes to allergies, it's not just things like pets or pollen that are making you woeful it mightiness also be your job or your relationship. A new sketch is proving that in that location is a link between how bad your allergies are, and how practically stress you're under.


Whether it's being outside about dust or pollen or inside around her friend's cat- thither are times
that Megan Sheasby feels like she just can't escape the grip of her allergies.


"My nose completely clogs up, my throat will sometimes, depending on the type of allergy, close up
as well, marxist, puffy eyes, just selfsame itchy," says Megan.


While it may be Megan's surroundings that trigger her allergies, a new study says it's stress that's
making them worse.


"We found that stress and anxiety create a gravid difference in terms of allergic responses," says Janice
Kiecolt-Glaser, PhD , Ohio State University Medical Center.


Researchers at Ohio State University Medical Center first put things like pollen and ragweed on the
implements of war of volunteers, and monitored their skin.


"If you don't have an allergy, you're just going to see a little bite of redness temporarily and that'll be
the end of it. But if you're a highly allergic person, you're going to get something called a wheal,"
says Ronald Glaser, PhD, Ohio State University Medical Center.


A welt looks like a bolshie, puffy area, and it tells doctors your hypersensitized. In a relaxed setting the
reactions were normal, but to see how stress would affect those with allergic reactions, experts
asked the volunteers to give a speech- in front of others and into a microphone. As stress levels went
up, the allergic reactions got worse, and in some cases it was 2 to 4 times as bad.


"So the take home message is, if you're allergic, stress and anxiousness are a bad combination," says
Kiecolt-Glaser.


It's a message some 50 million Americans* demand to hear, because the $3.4 billion allergies cost us
every year in this country** is nothing to sneeze at. Experts from Ohio State say anything you can
do to relax and reduce your stress, may end up helping to ease your allergies as well. Things like
massages and meditation could help.


The findings of the study will be presented this month at the American Psychological Association
Meeting in Boston.


*Allergy Facts & Figures, Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, retrieved August 2008, from http://www.aafa.org

**American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology, retrieved August 2008 from http://www.aaaai.org

Ohio State University Medical Center


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