Allergic Rhinitis and Asthma
Many people have both
allergic rhinitis and
asthma. If you have an allergy, you are more likely to
get asthma, and allergic rhinitis can make your asthma symptoms worse if you
already have asthma. When asthma is made worse by allergies, it is known as
allergic asthma.
Some experts now consider the two conditions to be one
inflammatory disease involving a common airway rather
than two distinct diseases. Research is ongoing. Four ideas on how allergic
rhinitis and asthma might be linked are as follows:
- Inflammation and irritation of the nasal passages
cause a reflex reaction within the lungs, perhaps through nerve
pathways.
- Relatively cold, dry air stimulates asthma symptoms when
allergic rhinitis sufferers must breathe in through their mouths because they
have stuffy noses.
- Drainage from the nose caused by allergic
rhinitis irritates the airways in the lungs.
- Cells that trigger
inflammation or chemicals that cause inflammation travel through the
bloodstream and cause inflammation in the lungs.
| By | Healthwise Staff |
| Primary Medical Reviewer | E. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine |
| Specialist Medical Reviewer | Rohit K Katial, MD - Allergy and Immunology |
| Last Revised | June 30, 2011 |
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Last Revised:
June 30, 2011