Pollen Allergy
A pollen allergy contributes to a person’s
allergies during
spring, summer, and fall. Trees, grasses,
and weeds release small particles that take
flight upon the wind currents. The particles
exist to fertilize plants, but usually never
reach their destination and usually settle in
human throats and noses. Rhinitis, or pollen
allergy occurs which are known by most as hay
fever.
Sometimes, the chemical makeup of pollen is the
contributing factor determining if it will cause
hay fever or a pollen allergy. Pine tree pollen
is usually produced in huge amounts by only a
common tree. You think this would be a wonderful
contributor of causing the pollen allergy. It
would seem that the chemical composition of pine
pollen makes it far less allergic than other
types of allergens; simply because the pine
needles fall down and do not travel upon the
winds; and not meeting human noses and throats.
Weeds, grasses, and trees usually cause a pollen
allergy reaction. These plants are the producers
of pollen granules that are created and carried
upon the wind. Ragweed pollen can be found two
to three miles in the air. A pollen allergy
usually is derived from plants that produce
pollen in very large quantities. It is not
abnormal for ragweed plants to produce millions
of pollen grains on a daily basis.
Pollen counts are not unfamiliar to people from
local weather reports, as this is a measurement
of exactly how much pollen is in our air. Pollen
counts are usually high in the morning on dry,
breezy, and warm days. The counts are at an all
time low during wet and cool periods. Folks who
have an active pollen allergy will need to make
use of pollen counts so that they may avoid
contact with pollen and remain indoors.
Those who have a pollen allergy only experience
symptoms when the grains from pollen are
circulating through the air. This is in fact,
one of the most obvious features of a pollen
allergy. Remember, this is a pollen allergy,
which is seasonal by nature. A plant’s
pollinating period is usually the same on a
yearly basis. Plants begin to pollinate
depending upon lengths of days and nights and
any location, geographically. Conditions of
weather when pollination occurs usually affect
the amount of pollen that are produced and
distributed during that year. This is especially
true for those who travel into far regions of
the north. The pollinating period and allergy
season occurs on a much later basis; gainfully
contributing to a pollen allergy.
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