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LOUIS AREA A DUBIOUS DISTINCTION D ORS SAY AIR HERE IS LOADED THROUGH POLLEN, GRASS, RAGWEED, MOLD, ETC. If all the allergy sufferers in St. Louis were to evacuate the region, we'd have about , fewer people. That probably won't happen, but the of a recent ranking may make such a move tempting. A study by a company that makes nasal sprays reports what both allergists and allergy sufferers have always known We're No No. worst that is. The worst city in the country for spring allergies. Dr. Doug Berson, an allergist in west St... Capital Times, The (Madison, WI) , ALLAYING ALLERGIES ADVANCES IMPROVE TESTING, TREATMENT Most people with allergies no longer need to have skin tests to determine the culprit behind their stuffy nose and watery eyes. ``When it comes to allergies, improvements have been made in the area of what we test for,'' says Dr. Reid Olson, an allergist with Dean Medical Center. ``We're a lot more specific in what we need to know. '' So, in most cases, allergy patients undergo a standard panel of to extracts for initial.. Deseret News, The (Salt Lake City, UT) , Allergies are nothing to sneeze at Ken discovered his food allergy in a dramatic fashion. At his senior prom dinner dance, he passed out. It was his first and hopefully last taste of shrimp. Thousands of Americans have allergies. Peanuts, grapefruit, strawberries, cats, rats, dogs, horses, grass, ragweed, bees. Name anything and someone, somewhere, may have an allergy. Some are easier to avoid or control than others. It's easier to avoid seafood than it is to stay away from grass pollen. Saturday, the.. THE ORLANDO SENTINEL , BAD ALLERGIES? BLAME EL NINO THE POLLEN COUNT IS HIGHER THAN NORMAL, AND THE MILD, WET WINTER CAUSED BY THE WEATHER SYSTEM IS TO BLAME. Central Florida's allergy season is in full bloom, with this year's version more intense and longer than usual. The culprit, as is so often the case these days El Nino. ``In a nutshell, there has been quite a bit of rainfall that has allowed trees to really flower,'' said Bill Toth, who heads the epidemiology section of the Orange County Health Department. ``The amount of pollen is far higher than normal, and we've heard people[.. Los Angeles Times , Phoenix as an Allergy Haven Now Something to Sneeze At Cynthia Merrell never had allergy problems before. So she was surprised when, soon after she moved here four years ago from Virginia, she started sniffling and sneezing and suffering from a stuffy nose. "I thought Arizona was supposed to be a good place for people with allergies," she said. Merrell is not alone. Experts say many people, including some physicians, still have an image of Arizona as a haven for allergy sufferers, a dry, clean desert environment that.. |
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