Daily Mail

WARNING Pollution could make your HAY FEVER DEADLY SERIOUS

Warmer weather, longer pollen seasons and filthy air are triggering worse symptoms than ever before. Here’s how YOU can beat it

- By JO WATERS

Streaming, itchy eyes, sneezing and blocked noses: the symptoms of hay fever lead to months of misery for an estimated 15 million people in this country. Cases, caused by the body mistakenly reacting to pollen, have been steadily growing for decades. in the Seventies, only 10 per cent of the population had it, but these days around 30 per cent of adults and 40 per cent of children are affected.

‘We are selling more antihistam­ines year on year,’ says Sultan Dajani, a community pharmacist in eastleigh, Hampshire. ‘as well as the usual symptoms, some people suffer terribly with sleep problems and this makes them fatigued and depressed, and impairs their concentrat­ion.’

now there are worrying signs that hay fever, once regarded as a minor complaint, is not just becoming more common, it is also starting to cause more

severe symptoms due, in part, to rising pollution levels.

‘Pollen particles are now more allergenic and more likely to cause reactions because they have evolved to produce proteins to protect themselves and survive,’ says Dr Helen Brough, a consultant paediatric allergy specialist at the private Portland Hospital For Women and Children.

‘Pollutants such as diesel can also break down pollen cells, making them smaller, so that they can get into the lungs and trigger asthma attacks in asthmatics and other people who are allergic to pollen.’

‘Ozone gas — the main ingredient of smog — is also an irritant to the respirator­y tract and can make hay fever symptoms seem worse, making your nose and eyes prickle and sting,’ adds Dr Jean emberlin, a hay fever expert with allergy UK.

adding to the problem is the fact that nitric oxide, emitted from traffic fumes, slows the beat of cilia, tiny hairlike projection­s in the respirator­y tract. this means pollen stays around for longer and is more likely to cause allergic symptoms.

the misery is being compounded by the fact that the effects of pollution mean pollen levels no longer need to be high to provoke hay fever symptoms.

‘Because pollution makes the pollen more allergenic, it may also push people who might not have had symptoms above the threshold for a reaction,’ says Dr Patrick Yong, a consultant immunologi­st at the royal Surrey County Hospital in guildford.

there are other issues too: increasing numbers of people with hay fever triggered

by birch tree pollen are also developing oral allergy syndrome, where the body mistakes the proteins in fruits, some vegetables or nuts as pollen and reacts to them, partly because warmer weather means the birch pollen season is extending.

‘The birch tree pollen season is starting on average a month earlier in mid-March compared with midApril in the Seventies and eighties,’ says Dr emberlin.

Calls about oral allergy syndrome to Allergy UK’s helpline rose by more than 70 per cent between 2014 and 2018. And unlike hay fever, oral allergy symptoms can last all year.

Indeed, as these people reveal, hay fever can be a life-changing condition that may lead to hospital treatment for some.

I GET SWOLLEN LIPS IF I EAT AN APPLE

StepheN carter, 54, is a designer and lives in langport, Somerset, with his partner peter, 55, a bakery and restaurant owner. he says: THere have been times when my hay fever has been so bad, and my eyes so unbearably itchy, that I have wanted to scratch them out of my head.

Occasional­ly I have had to pull over while driving because my eyes were streaming so much. Some mornings I have woken up struggling to breathe.

I had none of this until my late-40s when, after moving house, I suddenly started to develop itchy, streaming eyes in the winter. In the evenings I’d feel like I had gritty sand under my eyelids. I’d also have sneezing fits — I’d sneeze 15 times in a row and get a runny nose.

It was miserable and it left me feeling really fatigued. To try to control my symptoms, I bought antihistam­ine tablets, a nasal spray and eye drops, but it was still a struggle. I’ve also started reacting to pollen from fields of oilseed rape planted round my home.

Another complicati­on is that I also develop swollen lips and my throat starts to close up when I eat raw apple or almonds, a symptom of pollen allergy syndrome.

It usually dies down in a few minutes — but is just another thing to deal with.

It’s taken me years to get my hay fever under control and even now I sometimes have to take two of the one-a-day tablets to cope with it if I’m not driving. EXPERT COMMENT: ‘Taking two one-a-day antihistam­ines doesn’t give you any more relief but it may slow down your reaction times when driving, or make you get drunk quicker if you drink alcohol, so it’s not a good idea,’ says Sultan Dajani.

‘ Some people just don’t get control of their symptoms with standard antihistam­ines, though, so in those cases its worth seeing your GP for a prescripti­on of a stronger drug.

‘There is also a new generation faster- acting, longer- lasting corticoste­roid nasal spray, called Clarinase, which is available over the counter.’

Holly Shaw, a nurse adviser with Allergy UK, says usually people only develop hay fever in middle age when exposed to environmen­tal triggers they haven’t experience­d before, for example as a result of moving from the country to the city.

‘But sometimes people develop allergies later in life and we don’t know what causes the switch in their body to flick,’ she adds.

SYMPTOMS LANDED ME IN INTENSIVE CARE

Nicole Gray, 25, is a part-time student and lives in Musselburg­h, east lothian, Scotland, with her parents. She says: I DreAD the summer as pollen doesn’t just lead to sneezing and runny eyes — for me it can trigger a bad asthma attack. My worst one occurred when I was 17, on holiday in London right at the height of the grass pollen season. I was on the Undergroun­d and suddenly felt my throat close up.

I started struggling to breathe and my inhaler wasn’t relieving my symptoms.

My boyfriend called an ambulance; I was so scared, I thought I was going to die.

At the hospital, doctors tried to stabilise my symptoms with oxygen, steroids and other asthma drugs. I was distraught and cried. My symptoms subsided over the following three hours, but I needed to stay overnight in intensive care.

My hay fever is caused by tree and grass pollen — my symptoms start in March and last until the end of August, and despite regularly using antihistam­ines, the attacks it provokes are so hard to cope with.

I have been regularly admitted to hospital fighting for my breath, and on one occasion I spent two days in intensive care. Although I get asthma attacks in the winter, too, my attacks are always more severe and more frequent in the pollen season, and more likely to happen in cities.

I’m now on two different types of antihistam­ine, all year round, as well as using three types of asthma inhalers and a nebuliser, a machine that helps you breathe in medicine as a mist.

People think of hay fever as a minor inconvenie­nce, but for me it’s a nightmare. EXPERT COMMENT: GP Dr Andy Whittamore, clinical lead at Asthma UK, says that pollen can cause problems for those with asthma in two ways.

‘First, the pollen particles can be a trigger for an asthma attack, then the hay fever symptoms themselves can trigger an asthma attack so you get this double whammy effect,’ he explains.

‘ The tissue in the lungs is very similar to those found in

the nose, so what we sometimes find is that some people with hay fever later go on to develop asthma as the allergic reactivity spreads downwards.’

A LINE OF BIRCH TREES WAS THE TRIGGER

Jayne Weeden, 50, is a school admissions officer and lives in dorking, Surrey, with husband Chris, 50, an IT consultant, and their children Josh, 13, and daisy, 11. She says: These days I have to carry an epiPen with me at all times to provide an emergency shot of adrenaline in case I have a serious allergic reaction to fruit and vegetables, which is all part of my hay fever.

I also have to wear rubber gloves to chop vegetables or soak them in water, otherwise I develop hives — big red welts on my arms.

I developed hay fever aged 37 just after I moved to a new home backing on to a line of birch trees, which my GP believed was probably the trigger.

I start taking daily antihistam­ines in January so they’ll be effective by the start of the tree pollen season in February. But even if I take a pill in the morning, my eyes are streaming and I’m sneezing.

My hay fever symptoms — the congestion, sneezing — last from February until May; the oral allergy syndrome lasts all year and is really annoying. It started three years ago, when I peeled carrots or potatoes. Not only did I get hives, if I touched my eyes, they would also become red and itchy.

I’d previously noticed a tingling and slight swelling in my mouth and lips when I ate raw fruit such such as apples and plums.

I didn’t realise that all these symptoms can be connected to hay fever until I mentioned it to an instructor on a first aid course.

I react to apples, stone fruits, raw carrots and potatoes.

Usually, the hives will die down if I take an antihistam­ine and thoroughly wash my arms with soap and water — but it’s a constant worry.

EXPERT COMMENT: stephen Durham, a professor of allergy and respirator­y medicine at Imperial College London, says as many as 50 per cent of those people suffering from birch tree hay fever have oral allergy syndrome.

‘It can cause skin reactions as well as swelling of the lips and tongue if the proteins in the fruit, vegetable or nuts come into contact with the skin, but the effects are short lived and are not life threatenin­g,’ adds Dr emberlin.

I WAKE EVERYONE UP WITH MY SNEEZING

SIobhan GodWood, 43, is a journalist and lives in Linton, Cambridge, with husband alex, 44, a statistici­an, and their sons Conor, 16, aaron, 13, and Jamie, 11. She says: I’M FaMoUs for my non- stop sneezing. It kicks off at the end of February with tree pollen and I’m still suffering come the autumn because of allergies to weed pollen and mould spore.

My hay fever started at 13 and it has a huge impact on my life.

We take the kids camping a lot in the summer, and I always wake everyone up with my sneezing and then I can’t get back to sleep.

In the past few years pollen has become a trigger for my allergic asthma, causing wheezing and breathing difficulti­es.

I have to use a preventer inhaler every day and carry a reliever pump with me in case I get an attack. I can feel my throat get itchy, my chest whistle and feel tight and I start to cough. I always have to be on my guard.

I used to cycle to work by some rapeseed fields and had to change my route because I reacted so badly to the pollen and volatile compounds they give off.

EXPERT COMMENT: ‘We’re seeing that people need hay fever products for longer now — which in some cases may be because people now have multiple pollen allergies to tree, grass and weeds and because the pollen season is extending,’ says sultan Dajani.

 ?? Picture: GETTY ??
Picture: GETTY
 ??  ?? Worse with age — Stephen Carter
Worse with age — Stephen Carter
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? — Siobhan Godwood Kicks off asthma Pictures: JOHN LAWRENCE/GRAEME HUNTER/DAMIEN McFADDEN/RANN CHANDRIC
— Siobhan Godwood Kicks off asthma Pictures: JOHN LAWRENCE/GRAEME HUNTER/DAMIEN McFADDEN/RANN CHANDRIC
 ??  ?? Rushed to hospital — Nicole Gray
Rushed to hospital — Nicole Gray
 ??  ?? — Jayne Weeden Allergy to fruit too
— Jayne Weeden Allergy to fruit too

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