|
How Much Do The Allergy Injections Really
Help?
You must have heard about the fast acting allergy injections
and you might be led into believing that this is a great way to
relieve you from the pain caused by your often repeated
allergy. However, this is in fact a myth. There are no magic
allergy injections that would counter all the allergies that
plague people; actually these injections would be meant for
only one particular type of allergy and would therefore be
totally ineffectual for another type.
How Can One Profit From Allergy Injections?
The medical remedy that uses allergy injections is known as
allergen immunotherapy and it is used to combat specific
allergies. In order to find what type of allergy you are
suffering from the doctor would prescribe a long battery of
tests; these would include blood tests, skin tests and the like
until they zero in what exactly causes your allergy.
Before your doctor prescribes any allergy injections for you
the allergen that impacts you adversely would need to be
identified one hundred percent. Once this step is completed,
you would be set up for a series of allergy injections starting
from very low dosage to a certain level which is determined by
the medical practitioner.
Every time these injections are administered, the doctor would
have you under observation for about 30 minutes to check
whether you get any severe reaction from the shots. The
injection would be given every week over a period of six to
seven months, which would gradually make you immune to the
allergen. When you reach the highest dose (that compares it the
level of the allergen in the environment around you) the weekly
injection would be replaced with a monthly booster, which might
continue for one to ten years depending upon the need.
As you can see, the allergy injections are indeed a great way
to fight an allergy – but in order for it to be effective, you
would need to identify the allergen. Unless you know what the
allergen is, this therapy would not work because the injection
are prepared just like a vaccine, i.e. it would infuse small
doses of that exact allergen until your body accepts it and
thereafter helps to prevent its adverse reaction..
These injections are best used against insect bites or stings,
such as bees, mosquitoes, red ants, wasps, etc. Though these
could be and are used against inhaled allergens as well, the
latter are more difficult to cure. Anyway, this is a small ray
of hope that you could check out – who knows, it might get you
rid of your pet allergy after all.
|