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In spring’s excitement with its warm weather, budding flowers, and the bits of green beginning to peek up out of the ground, it’s also a time to stock up on tissues and medication to keep the allergies at a minimum.

As it turns out, allergies have been shown to affect your nose and your mental health.

Researchers have found that allergies may reinforce or even cause depression in some people. So if you find yourself feeling down during the bright and sunny spring and summer months, your culprit could be just under your nose. Or rather, it is your nose.

The Allergy And Depression Connection

Although allergies haven’t resulted in clinical depression, they affect a person’s mood and well-being. Those with allergies may feel sad, tired, lethargic, or experience mood changes. And studies say that allergies make a person 50% more likely to have depressive symptoms. These symptoms, however, are more physiological, such as having low amounts of energy rather than emotional.

For example, if you’re one of the 36 million people in America who suffer from allergies, you probably know all about the daily battle with the outdoors. For this reason, many people with allergies will simply refrain from going outside at all during the day, which can cause crankiness or restlessness.

Also, due to the constant wheezing, coughing, and sneezing, allergies and the medications taken for prevention can cause tiredness or irritability. Even the allergic reaction releases cytokines that cause sickness, fatigue, or mentally drained feelings.

Any of the symptoms described above can put almost everyone in a bad mood.

How Exactly Can Allergies Affect Mood?

It’s important to understand that allergic reactions most likely don’t cause depression directly and are rarely the primary cause. More commonly, it can hurt your mood or make depression worse.

Most mood changes or depressive reactions you have to allergies are similar to that one would feel under a lot of stress. In the simplest of terms, allergies just wear you out.

It is good to simply be aware of the possibility of allergies affecting your mood because it can help to take the weight off your shoulders. However, it is essential to keep in mind that if you suffer from depression, there are likely other parts of the equation aside from allergies.

Allergies In Children

Children can also suffer from mood changes and depression caused by allergies, and they can even be more susceptible since their bodies are more sensitive.

Of course, their reactions will be a district, such as temper tantrums or having trouble sleeping.

Effects of Allergy Medications On Mood

The allergy itself isn’t the only thing that can cause mood changes. Several medications taken to prevent or treat allergies may have harmful side effects.

Antihistamines, for example, can cause sleep deprivation or grogginess. Other allergy medications can also result in irregular sleeping patterns, which can, in turn, bring irritability. Other side effects include heart problems, insomnia, and sometimes prostate problems in men.

Conclusion

And after all that, this new research may seem to have taken things from bad to worse. With spring comes allergies, medications, depression, and downhill we go. The good news is that being aware can decrease stress or confusion and ultimately empower.

Don’t let your allergies get you down! Make sure you find a medication or treatment that’s right for you and your specific situation. Take the necessary steps to bring happiness back into spring.

Partha’s Prescriptions

  • Consume local raw honey. Studies have found that eating honey produced locally can dramatically reduce allergy symptoms. You must choose honey produced by local honey bees, as they have contact with the plants that are giving you allergies in the first place.
  • Diffuse eucalyptus & frankincense essential oil. Diffusing these potent oils in your home can help kill allergy-causing house mites, reduce inflammation, and act antibacterial and antimicrobial. Another way to benefit from these oils is to add ten drops to each load of laundry in the washing machine.
  • Take probiotics. Taking a high-quality probiotic supplement has been found to reduce the risk of allergies.
  • Eat an anti-inflammatory diet. Allergies occur due to a hypersensitive immune system. Strengthen your immune system by including anti-inflammatory foods in your diet, such as turmeric, garlic, bone broth, leafy greens, lemons, berries, etc.

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