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Medicine for nitrek allergy

A 33-year-old male asked:
Dr. Heidi Fowler
Psychiatry 27 years experience
Nitrek allergy: Transdermal nitroglycerin is used to dilate blood vessels. An allergy occurs when your body’s immune system creates antibodies to a foreign substance... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A member asked:
Dr. Al Hegab
Dr. Al Hegabanswered
Allergy and Immunology 42 years experience
Stop taking it: If it is an extreme necessity, and there are no alternatives, and you don't know whether this an allergic reaction or an adverse drug reaction (s... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 50-year-old member asked:
Dr. Justin Greiwe
A Verified Doctoranswered
Allergy and Immunology 14 years experience
Various Options: Daily steroid or antihistamines nasal sprays (fluticasone, azelastine) are helpful. Determining exactly what you could be sensitized to in order to pr... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 42-year-old male asked:
Dr. Powlin Manuel
Allergy and Immunology 53 years experience
Could be!: Without understanding the circumstances and the type of reaction, it is impossible to answer the question. If you started the new medicine, and experi... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 42-year-old member asked:
Dr. Michael Zacharisen
Allergy and Immunology 35 years experience
No cure yet, but...: Allergy shots (allergen immunotherapy) is currently the only treatment that is disease modifiying, meaning it can change how the body responds to expo... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 41-year-old member asked:
Dr. Jack Mutnick
Allergy and Immunology 19 years experience
OTC Allergy: Not fair. Truly, it is trial-and-error. What works best for you might not work best for someone else. Loratadine is the weakest binding non-sedating a... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 42-year-old member asked:
Dr. Anthony LaBarbera
Dr. Anthony LaBarberaanswered
Pediatrics 30 years experience
See below: It depends on the severity of the reaction. Certainly removal of the offending drug is the first step. Then medication to help with itching or hives, ... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 39-year-old member asked:
Dr. Andrew Murphy
Allergy and Immunology 31 years experience
No: Drug allergies are generally not hereditary.
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 42-year-old member asked:
Dr. Michael Zacharisen
Allergy and Immunology 35 years experience
Several choices: The most effective treatment for relief of seasonal allergies are prescription nasal steroid sprays (qnasl, nasonex, (mometasone) rhinocort, flonase).... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
A 45-year-old member asked:
Dr. Steven Machtinger
Allergy and Immunology 46 years experience
Big question: There are a lot of allergy medications & your time span is enormous. Could you take a medication that expired last month? Yes. Last year? Yes, but it ... Read More
Created for people with ongoing healthcare needs but benefits everyone.
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