Houston Chronicle Sunday

Here’s where pollen was the worst last year

- By Kasha Patel

If you live in the U.S. Midwest, buckle up for an intense allergy season … for the rest of your life.

Allergy season is becoming more intense across the country, lasting longer and with more pollen in the air. That’s bad news for the more than 60 million people in the United States who suffer from allergy-related sneezing, congestion and watery eyes. And just like brands of tissues, not all pollen-induced sneeze-fests are equal. Some places have it especially bad.

A report released Wednesday by the nonprofit Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America revealed last year’s U.S. “allergy capitals.” These were the most challengin­g places to live for those with pollen allergies. The rankings were based on pollen counts and took into account use of over-thecounter medication and the number of allergy physicians in the area.

The most difficult spot to live with allergies last year was Wichita, Kan., according to the report, followed by Dallas; Scranton, Pa.; Oklahoma City; and Tulsa, Okla., to round out the Top 5 locations. Seven cities in the Top 20 were in Florida.

Some of the least challengin­g places to live with allergies last year, according to the report, were Buffalo; Seattle; Cleveland; Austin; Akron, Ohio; and Washington, D.C. While those locations may have had relatively less pollen than other parts of the country, they also had good access to medicine and specialist­s, according to the report.

“We’re seeing a lot more (pollen) in the South, which is what we are expecting because the southern cities have warmer winters. The plants grow and produce pollen for longer periods of time,” said Sanaz Eftekhari, the foundation’s vice president of research and an author of the report. Some cities in the Northeast, such as Scranton, rank high because of their lack of over-the-counter medication use and number of allergists.

This year’s results largely fit in with regional trends seen around the past decade in the foundation’s pollen data, which is collected from various pollen sensors in the Top 100 most populated U.S. metropolit­an areas. In data shared with the Washington Post, the cities that have consistent­ly ranked in the past decade as having the highest pollen rankings in the country include: McAllen; Oklahoma City; Richmond, Va.; San Antonio; and this year’s champ, Wichita.

“Wichita and Pennsylvan­ia are some areas that have some extremely high levels,” said Landon Bunderson, a pollen researcher and CEO of Pollen Sense, a company that provided pollen data for this year’s Allergy Cities report. While many ground stations capture pollen grains and require someone to count them by hand (like Bunderson had to do for his Ph.D. research), these devices automatica­lly count grains each hour.

While they were not part of the report, Bunderson said, the company’s ground sensors have also observed “megaevents” — an hour that experience­s above 15,000 pollen grains per cubic meter. He said those typically occur as a microburst on the front end of a storm.

“They’re happening when we have a big day for ripening and then we get an extreme wind event,”

Bunderson said. As pollen is released, our bodies can mistakenly identify the harmless substance as dangerous and produce chemicals to fight it, causing sneezing, wheezing, watery eyes and congestion.

“For someone who suffers from asthma, those (megaevents) are lifethreat­ening,” he said.

This year’s allergy season is coming in early and in full force. Parts of the South and Northeast experience­d record warmth in January and February. As a result, spring leaves appeared up to 20 days early in the eastern half of the country. The South experience­d its earliest arrival of spring in four decades.

High pollen counts followed suit, according to Pollen Sense sensors. Atlanta saw “extremely high” pollen counts in March, according to Atlanta Allergy & Asthma’s pollen counting station. In Washington, D.C., tree pollen count reached a record high in February.

“Because we had a milder winter overall, we’ve been seeing an earlier pollen bloom,” said Anjeni Keswani, the physician and director of George Washington University’s Allergy, Asthma & Sinus Center in Washington, D.C. “Also, because of the milder winter, our mold spores did not significan­tly frost or freeze over, so we’re having a slightly earlier mold season as well.”

Keswani said she typically starts seeing pollen cases around March, but tree pollen levels increased as early as January and February. People started coming in around Valentine’s Day to treat their symptoms.

She added that bustling cities, with a lot of traffic exhaust particles that mix in with the pollen, can spell even more bad news for people.

“If we breathe in sort of the air pollution of the particulat­e matter at the same time as the pollen, it actually can stimulate the immune system even more and create more symptoms,” Keswani said.

It’s not particular­ly simple to forecast pollen plumes, and thus allergy intensity, far out — the plumes often depend on weather and wind conditions, which can worsen and spread pollen. At the moment, Pollen Sense can forecast three days into the future.

Right now, Keswani said, she’s just trying to prevent and treat pollen allergies in people with immunizati­on shots and medication.

“Pollen and pollen allergies are here to stay. With climate change, they’re actually potentiall­y going to get worse,” she said.

Allergy sufferers know how this goes: Spring starts calling, and pollen begins falling. Blooms keep rolling, and our noses became swollen.

But recently, people are experienci­ng a more intense allergy season — and climate change is the reason.

Climate change affects allergy season in multiple ways. Many trees and plants require a certain amount of sustained warmth to trigger budding. Warmer winter temperatur­es allow them to accumulate the required amount of heat faster, causing them to start blooming earlier and for longer periods of time. The average temperatur­e of winter, the fastest-warming season, has increased by more than 3 degrees Fahrenheit in the eastern United States since 1970.

Increased levels of carbon dioxide could also help supercharg­e photosynth­esis, so trees and plants produce more pollen.

Ecologists, physicians and atmospheri­c scientists have already documented changes. Across North America, pollen season has lengthened by 20 days since 1990. Pollen concentrat­ions have also increased by 21 percent over the past three decades. Data showed the largest changes in the Midwest and Texas.

Climate models show pollen season could worsen by the end of the century with high greenhouse gas emissions. The northern United States will experience more changes than the south due to larger changes in temperatur­e, but it also depends on the tree species in each area.

“On a larger scale, we really do support any efforts to mitigate climate change because, in the long term, that’s what’s leading to this increased concentrat­ion of pollen in the air,” Eftekhari said.

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