Is It Just a Cold or Is It Allergies?

Article

A pediatric allergist provides tips for counseling parents on how to tell the difference between common cold and allergies.

One of the problems that parents often have during spring is deciphering whether their children’s sneezing is a cold or allergies.

Runny, stuffy, or itchy noses, sneezing, coughing, fatigue, and headaches can all be symptoms of both allergies and colds, but when parents pay close attention to minor details they will be able to tell the difference, according to Michelle Lierl, MD, a pediatric allergist at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center who provides tips for pharmacists on counseling parents.

“Children who have springtime or fall allergies have much more itching of their noses; they often have fits of sneezing and usually rub their noses in an upward motion. They also complain about an itchy, scratchy throat or itchy eyes, whereas with a cold, they don’t,” she said in a press release.

Dr. Lierl also said that nasal discharge for allergy patients is usually clear and has the consistency of watery mucus, while patients who have colds usually have yellowish mucus discharge.

The Immunocap, or RAST, blood test can screen for allergy to specific foods or airborne allergens. Children experiencing seasonal allergy symptoms should be tested for environmental allergens present during that season and not for food allergies or allergens present during seasons when they had no symptoms. The results of the RAST test are back after seven to 10 days, whereas allergists can do allergy skin testing in one day in the doctor’s office.

For parents whose children are found to have allergies, Dr. Lierl suggests the following tips to combat symptoms:

  • Windows should be kept closed during periods of very high pollen and fungal spore levels.
  • Change air conditioner filters every month.
  • Change children’s clothing when they come inside from the outdoors. Clothes should also be washed thoroughly to rid them of all of the outdoor pollutants.
  • Children should wash their face, hands and hair after being outside.
  • Wash the child’s eyes and nose with a non-prescription saline solution when the child has been outside to remove the pollen and fungal spores from the eyes.
  • Minimize early morning outdoor activity since pollen counts are higher in the morning.
  • Keep vehicle windows closed while traveling with an allergic child in the car to keep allergens and pollen out.
  • Most important, make sure children take their allergy medicine daily during the pollen season.

For more information about allergies, check out the April issue of Pharmacy Times, which focuses on asthma and allergy.

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