Allergic Rhinitis: A Critical Modern Review

  • Narender Chanchal Assistant Professor, Department of Shalakya Tantra, Kunwar Shekhar Vijendra Ayurveda Medical College & Research Centre, Shobhit University, Gangoh, Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh.
  • Smriti Kaul MS Scholar, PG Department of Shalakya Tantra, Patanjali Bhartiya Ayurvigyan Evum Anusandhan Sansthan, Haridwar, Uttarakhand, India
  • Riju Agrawal Associate Professor & Head, Dept. of Shalakya Tantra, Ch Brahm Prakash Ayurved Charak Sansthan, New Delhi.
  • Daya Shankar Singh Associate Professor, Shalakya Tantra Department, Patanjali Bhartiya Ayurvigyan Evam Anusandhan Santhan, Haridwar, Uttarakhand.
Keywords: Allergic rhinitis, hypersensitive rhinitis, Local nasal allergy, immunotherapy, SPT, RAST, subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT), sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT)

Abstract

Allergic rhinitis addresses a hyperactivity of the resistant framework in any case harmless particles making a fiery reaction where none is required. Allergic Rhinitis is clinically represented by a mixture of two or additional nasal symptoms: running, blocking, itching and sneezing. Allergic rhinitis is regularly partitioned by age, seriousness, and duration of symptoms. Investigation represents how epidemiologic evaluations on the commonness of hypersensitive or allergic rhinitis shift considerably with whether both clinical appraisal and testing were utilized to make the determination. The treatment of allergic rhinitis should combine allergen avoidance, pharmacotherapy and allergen immunotherapy. Treatments of allergic rhinitis include intranasal corticosteroids, oral and topical antihistamines, decongestants, intranasal cromolyn, intranasal anticholinergics. First-generation and Second-generation oral antihistamines and intranasal corticosteroids are the most effective modality for treating allergic rhinitis. Immunotherapy is an efficient immune-modulating treatment that ought to be counseled if pharmacologic medical care for allergic rhinitis isn't effective or not tolerated. This article provides an overview of the prevalence, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and appropriate management of the allergic rhinitis.

Published
05-02-2022
How to Cite
Narender Chanchal, Smriti Kaul, Riju Agrawal, & Daya Shankar Singh. (2022). Allergic Rhinitis: A Critical Modern Review. International Journal of Ayurveda and Pharma Research, 10(1), 78-86. https://doi.org/10.47070/ijapr.v10i1.2251
Section
Articles