With Allergy Season In Full
Swing, New Treatment Choices Arrive
May
Is Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month
While most people
are happy to bid farewell to the cold and snow of winter, not
everyone is equally excited to see spring and summer arrive.
The reason: seasonal
allergies, a problem that plagues some 35 million Americans
beginning as early as March and often lasting through the first
frost in the fall.
"Spring and summer
allergies are extremely common, mostly because there are so
many different allergens that come into bloom this time of the
year," says Dr. Clifford Bassett, an allergy and asthma specialist
at New York University Medical Center.
Whether it be trees,
grass, flowers or weeds, when the small, dry, light pollen becomes
airborne, simply taking a deep breath outdoors can leave a person
sneezing, wheezing, tearing, and itching for up to six months
of the year.
To heighten awareness
of the problem and educate people about treatments new and old,
May is designated Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month.
Hope for
Those Most Affected
While some relief
from allergies can be found through practical means, such as
keeping windows closed and staying indoors when pollen counts
are high, for many people spring and summer survival is made
possible by any number of medications designed to stifle allergic
reactions. These include antihistamines, nasal decongestants,
and anti-inflammatory nasal sprays. Many of these are available
over-the-counter, as well as by prescription.
However, a brand new
class of prescription drugs is posed to join the anti-allergy
arsenal. Known as anti-IgE, this new treatment may revolutionize
not only the way seasonal allergies are treated, but also the
treatment of asthma and food and drug sensitivities.
"It is the first phase
of a new kind of treatment for allergy disease, and it holds
some very exciting promise," says Dr. Lanny Rosenwasser, president
of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology
and a researcher and allergist at the National Jewish Medical
and Research Center in Denver.
Regardless of what
a person is allergic to, the cascade of biochemical events that
make up an allergic reaction are remarkably similar. Key to
the process is an immune system antibody known as IgE, or immunoglobulin
E.
With a seasonal allergy, airborne pathogens, particularly pollen,
are inhaled. As they enter the body they bind to the IgE antibodies.
These antibodies, in turn, bind to nearby mast cells and basophils -
immune system molecules that line your lungs, skin, and mucous
membranes.
As this occurs, the
mast cells and basophils become inflamed and irritated, which
then sparks the release of a wide range of biochemicals. The
end result is one particular chemical known as histamine, which
floods your tissues. When it does, blood vessels and tissues
in a person's nose begin to dilate and swell, while sensitive
nerve endings become highly irritated. This produces an "allergy
attack."
"In the case of seasonal
allergies, histamine would initiate the classic sneezing, wheezing
and stuffy nose, along with itchy, red, watery eyes," Bassett
says.
Preventing
Allergic Reactions
For many years, the
treatment of seasonal allergies relied on preventing or reducing
histamine production, as well as mast cell inflammation. While
the treatments worked well, to get optimum relief they had to
be administered before exposure because, once histamine production
began it could not really be reversed.
However, the new anti-IgE
treatments take an entirely different approach, working to help
prevent the body from reacting to an allergen in the first place.
"An anti-IgE binds
to IgE and ties it up, preventing it from activating and inflaming
the mast cells," Rosenwasser says.
The body is "tricked"
into believing there is no allergen present. So, it responds
as if there were no allergy.
More importantly, anti-IgEs are not "allergen-specific." Theoretically,
they can work to block almost any type of allergic reaction.
"It has promise in
all allergic diseases," says Rosenwasser, "including drug and
food allergies."
The good news is that the first anti-IgE medication, a drug
known as omalizumab, may be approved by the US Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) in time for the spring-summer
allergy season.
The new drug must
be administered by a physician. It is given by injection once
or twice a month. And since it was tested primarily in asthma
patients, it's true effectiveness with seasonal allergies has
not yet been fully determined, experts say.
"For those who have
standard hay fever, which can be easily controlled by nasal
steroids or an antihistamine, anti-IgE medication may not be
economically feasible - at least in the beginning," Rosenwasser
says.
If, however, allergies
are severe, and particularly if a person has not found
relief from available treatments, Xolair may be worth a try.
Research
Continues for New Drugs
Besides Xolair, other
IgE drugs are in development to help treat various types of
allergies. Earlier this year, studies published in the New
England Journal of Medicine showed how one anti-IgE
medication reduced the life-threatening affects of a peanut
allergy.
In addition, Rosenwasser
and colleagues at the National Jewish Medical and Research Center
are developing yet another allergy treatment called Anti CD23.
It works by thwarting the connection between allergens and the
immune system at an even earlier stage than the anti-IgE drugs,
and similarly disrupting the sequence of allergic responses.
This treatment could be available within several years.
Always consult your
physician for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization
is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology
Asthma
and Allergy Foundation of America
National
Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
US
Department of Heath and Human Services
US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
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May 2003
May
is Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month
Hope for
Those Most Affected
Preventing
Allergic Reactions
Research
Continues for New Drugs
Asthma
Affects Millions of People
Medications
Designed To Relieve Symptoms
Online
Resources
Asthma
Affects Millions of Americans
You begin to take
a breath, and find your chest has inexplicably tightened. Wheezing
and coughing, you struggle to take in air.
Your airways have
become blocked or narrowed. The small tubes that carry air through
your lungs, the bronchi and bronchioles, have suddenly become
inflamed. They are suffering a double assault -- constricted
by tightened muscles outside and flooded by mucus inside.
Millions of American
may be worrying whether their next breath will come easy. May
is Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month, a time
when doctors and activists hope to spread more information about
the disease.
Asthma attacks can
be triggered by allergens, tobacco smoke or exercise - particularly
when exercising in cold air.
If an attack is serious
enough and left untreated, it can be fatal.
The US Department of Heath and Human Services
says low-income and minority groups are more likely to die during
an asthma attack, probably due to lack of access to proper medication.
From 1993 to 1995,
there was an average of 38 asthma-related deaths per 1 million African
Americans, compared with 15 deaths per 1 million Caucasians
during that same period.
Many doctors believe
the increase in Americans' susceptibility to allergies and asthma
may be linked to the fact that children are leading healthier
lives in cleaner living spaces.
The body typically
grows resistant to allergies while fighting off childhood infections
and diseases, says Dr. Henry Li, an allergist with the Institute
for Asthma and Allergy.
But children are facing
fewer infections as they grow up, which could leave them more
susceptible to asthma, Li adds.
"When a society has
developed, and we have a cleaner and cleaner environment, there
is less chance of getting childhood infections," Li says.
Heredity also plays
a large part, says Stacey Schubert, an asthma sufferer who also
works as an epidemiologist with the asthma program at the Oregon
Department of Human Services.
Schubert's mother
has asthma and her father suffers from allergies. Her brother
also struggles with asthma. "There's definitely a genetic component
to asthma," she says.
Schubert has had asthma
since she was a child, and has seen great improvements in the
treatment of the disease. The newer drugs have improved
to the point where she can lead a very active lifestyle with
few asthma attacks. Schubert enjoys step aerobics, kickboxing,
weight lifting, and biking, and she enjoys them without the
ever-present fear of losing her breath.
"Generally speaking,
I don't have flare-ups or exacerbations," she says. "Controlling
my asthma is very easy. I take my medications."
Always consult your
physician for more information.
Medications
Designed To Relieve Symptoms
The two commonly types
of asthma medications used to treat asthma include long-term
control medication and short-term, quick-relief medication.
Though the goal of both medications is to treat asthma symptoms,
they are used for different purposes.
Long-term control
medication is usually taken every day to control asthma symptoms
and to prevent the occurrence of asthma attacks.
Quick-relief medication
is primarily taken to relieve the sudden onset of asthma symptoms
(such as during an asthma attack), and in cases in which the
asthma symptoms only occur occasionally.
In addition, a relatively
new treatment using anti-leukotrienes
is being used to help control the symptoms of asthma. These
medications help to decrease the narrowing of the lung and to
decrease the chance of fluids in the lungs. These are usually
given by mouth.
The type of medication
prescribed by your physician to treat your asthma symptoms depends
on the type and severity of your asthma, as well as your other
individual medical needs.
Always consult your
physician for more information.
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