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Exploring Alternative Approaches To Hay Fever

By Rosemary Byfield
The Epoch Times
Jul 16, 2005



HEALTHY BREW: Chinese herbal preparations can help to relieve symptoms of hay fever. (Photos.com)
High-resolution image (2400 x 1633 pixels, 300 dpi)
For 15 to 20% of the population in Britain the thought of lying in the grass soaking up the sun in summer and breathing in the fragrance-filled air is their worst nightmare. Just picturing it for them may be enough to make their eyes itchy, noses runny or start a bout of sneezing.

Hay fever, also known as seasonal allergic rhinitis, is an allergy to pollens - the male reproductive parts of plants - from grasses and trees. Fungi can also trigger the condition. The UK pollen season can start in April, although it most commonly causes reactions from early June until mid-July or early August. The peak season starts earlier in the south of England and finishes later in Scotland.

So why does pollen cause such uncomfortable symptoms? The immune system goes into defence mode to protect the body, mistaking pollen for a threatening invader. Asthma and eczema sufferers are particularly susceptible to developing hayfever in response to their already over-sensitive immune systems.

As an alternative to antihistamines and steroids in Western treatment methods, let’s look at how Chinese medicine approaches the cause and treatment of hay fever. It is said that the Wei Qi or Defensive Energy is weak, not unlike a weakened immune system. According to Chinese medicine practitioner, Dermot O'Connor, “Many patients with hay fever will have a history of being treated with repeated antibiotics as children as well as eating a diet high in sugars, dairy products, fruit juices and yeasted grain products. It is suggested that the immune response of hay fever sufferers has been hampered in some way as a result of these elements.”

Acupuncture is used to balance, unblock or strengthen the Lung Qi (lung energy), depending on the person’s constitution and symptoms. From the standpoint of Chinese medicine, stagnation in the lungs can lead to sneezing, nasal discharge and congestion. Also Chinese herbs would be given to strengthen the underlying energy of the Wei Qi.
In a study in the West, as reported in Allergy magazine, 52 patients between the ages of 20 and 58 all diagnosed with seasonal allergic rhinitis, were randomly assigned to a traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) group or a control group.

In the TCM group each person received a weekly 20 minute acupuncture session, based on their personal factors and symptoms. By the end of the study period the severity of hay fever was “significantly less pronounced in the TCM group”.

Jan de Vries, a Naturopath with six complementary health clinics across UK, recommends a herbal remedy, which is a complex of tropical herbs including Sponge Cucumber. He says, “In my experience it is one of the most exceptional remedies for hay fever and I have seen the proof of its success throughout the world. In acute attacks, taking ten drops of the tincture every hour for five hours often brings quick, welcome relief.”

Another treatment that is traditionally used to treat frozen shoulder, back pain or bad knees, is the Bowen technique, which consists of a sequence of very precise and gentle moves over muscles and soft tissue. However, patients have reported to Bowen practitioner, Jill Lebor that their hay fever miraculously vanished, “as a side effect of the Bowen treatment.”

For more information: www.acupuncture.com, www.healthywaymagazine.com, www.thebowentechnique.com

Copyright 2004 - The Epoch Times