Prevent Dust Allergies by use Air Humidifiers
If you suffer from dust allergies or particles in dust such as dust mites and bacteria, a air humidifiers may be solution for you to prevent from allergies.
Everyday you spend a lot of time in air conditioned rooms or offices where collection of dust that a reason why people seem to fall ill such as coughs and colds.
Air humidifiers will add moisture into the air in your rooms or offices, it can hugely help to solve cause of the air dry problem from the air condition.
Air humidifiers are extremely cheap nowadays with the advancement of technology, and are now a very cost effective way of improving your health.
Prevent Dust Allergies by use Air Humidifiers
Labels: air humidifiers, Dust-allergy
House Dust and Allergy
People who are sensitive to house dust suffer from a form of allergic rhinitis which can cause identical symptoms to those of a pollen allergy. Fortunately, the symptoms usually subside within half an hour once the person has removed himself from the house environment. The normal activities of making beds, dusting, vacuuming, beating mats, etc. tend to bring on the running nose, hay fever and other symptoms which indicate that an allergenic dust has been released into the surrounding air. A sensitive person may find that when he wakes in the morning he has a blocked nose and itchy eyes. In a dusty house he may even wake during the night, wheezing and short of breath. Housewives may have symptoms throughout the day because of constant exposure.
House dust is a composition of cotton, wool fibres, kapok fibres, moulds, human and animal hair, danders (skin flakes), food particles, insect fragments and a variety of substances brought in from outside the house. Although all these materials are to varying degrees, allergenic, the main problem is a living mite - a microscopic, tick-like creature whose main diet is human and animal dander. There are a number of different types of mites; some live in mattresses, whilst others prefer old upholstered furniture. Sensitivity to house dust, therefore, is mainly a sensitivity to the house mite. Treatment of house dust allergy involves removal of the mite and tests to ascertain a course of desensitisation therapy.
Obviously, environmental control is the key to resolving house dust/mite allergy and much can be done to minimize its existence by careful and regular cleaning. In the bedroom, particularly, vacuuming should be done daily and the bed vacuumed at least weekly. Regular exposure of both bed and bedding to sunlight will further retard growth and numbers of the mite. Pets should be excluded from the bedroom and if possible from the rest of the house, as their dander will greatly increase house mite population. Throughout the house regular cleaning is essential. In chronic cases carpets should be replaced by a hard surface with scatter rugs that are aired and beaten daily. Curtains should be of cotton or nylon and washed regularly.
Often, irritation of the nasal mucous membranes has been caused by reaction to an inhaled chemical or an ingested food or chemical. This in turn creates the right climate for a more serious reaction to house dust than might otherwise have occurred. Avoidance of other allergenic substances will help considerably in overcoming house dust sensitivity.
Author's Sites: Health Articles, Home Remedies and Natural Remedies.
Labels: Dust-allergy, Dust-mite-allergy
Dust Mite Allergy - How To Minimise Exposure
If you suffer from asthma or similar breathing difficulties you will undoubtedly be very sensitive to the quality of the air around you. Whilst you cannot personally do much to influence the quality of the air outside your home, inside is a very different matter.
Household dust is largely made up of dead skin particles shed by we humans and our pets, all of which make a tasty feast for the dust mite. It is the dust mite’s function in life to chomp his way through this debris and prevent us from drowning in our own filth.
This beastly little chap is too small to be seen with the naked eye – he along with 5,000 of his minute friends could comfortably sit on the head of a pin, and they congregate wherever there is food for them. The most hospitable places in our homes are in our beds, upholstery and carpets as all of these harbour dust.
Whilst we largely live in harmony with dust mites, inevitably, as with all animals, what goes in one end comes out again the other end, albeit in a different form. It is the excretia of the dust mite that creates allergies in some of us.
If you have difficulty breathing at night, or frequently wake up with that ‘bunged up’ feeling, your bedding is undoubtedly in need of a spring clean. So put a fresh filter in your vacuum cleaner and get to work on your mattress and when you’ve thoroughly vacuumed the top, turn it over and do the other side as well. If you have a box spring base you will also need to vacuum that . Do the same with your pillows, but if they are more than a few years old, replace them with new ones. Dry clean blankets and/or duvets or, if they’re washable put them on a minimum of 60oC cycle (anything less and the little blighters will survive!).
For most of us this exercise, carried out approximately twice a year, will make enough of a difference to return us to rested sleep filled nights. However, for those who are hypersensitive, suffering from asthma and/or hay fever, more drastic measures may be necessary to keep household dust to a minimum.
On a regular basis (at least twice a week) it will be necessary to
– damp wipe all surfaces to remove the dust, (rather than push it around to resettle somewhere else), – vacuum, rather than sweep, all floors. – keep your bedroom and bedding well aired - dust mites thrive in high humidity
It’s also a good idea to:
– vacuum upholstery with the same thoroughness you used on your mattress
– use zippered plastic covers for your mattress and pillows to prevent dust penetration
– keep pets out of the bedroom, regularly wash their bedding on a hot cycle and frequently vacuum the areas where they predominantly live
– remove carpets and replace with hard flooring.
Unfortunately it is impossible to eliminate dust mites from our homes, but the above measures should make living with them more comfortable.
The author has for the last 13 years run a domestic cleaning agency http://www.selclene.co.uk/ providing regular cleaners to private homes in the Forest of Dean and Wye Valley. In response to the increasing demand for spring cleans, pre and post house move cleans etc she has started another cleaning business www.rainbowcleaners.co.uk
Labels: Dust-allergy, Dust-mite-allergy, Dust-mites
Dust Mites And Allergies - Learn The Facts
Believe it or not, the average home can contain well over two million house
dust mites with a new generation arriving every three weeks. The life span of each dust mite is 3 to 4 months and between 20 and 50 eggs are laid every three weeks. Each dust mite excretes 20 droppings per day. In fact they can excrete so much that a pillow which has not been cleaned for two years could way 10% more than when new because of all the droppings in it.The enzymes which are in the droppings are what cause allergic reactions such as asthma and rhinitis.
Luckily, there are ways to deal with dust mites:
Open your windows every day to air out your house, especially the bedroom. Pull back your covers before you do this. Dust mites need humidity to survive and this will dry them out.
Regularly vacuum your soft furnishings and carpet using a hepa-filter vacuum cleaner
Have your Mattress and carpets professionally cleaned at least once a year. Use a cleaning company that is licensed to use dustmite eradication products.
A top tip for children's soft toys is to bag them and put them in the freezer. This will kill any mites on them and their eggs.
The common all year round symptoms of allergies like rhinitis should disappear very quickly if the above steps are followed. Remember that our indoor air is more responsible for our allergies than the pollution outside. This is a good thing because it means we have control over the environment which effects us the most!
For more information on dustmites including a short video of a leading doctor from Cambridge university lecturing this topic please visit:
http://www.ethoscarpetcare.com/healthy-home/allergy-control.shtml
Labels: Dust-allergy, Dust-mite-allergy, Dust-mites
Dust Away Dust Allergy
Because dusts are everywhere, the occurrence of dust allergy is almost always inevitable and its number is rapidly increasing. Dust allergy is one of the most common forms of allergy reported or recorded not just in the United States, but around the world.
Dust allergy is one of the most common forms of allergy reported or recorded not just in the United States, but around the world. Because dusts are everywhere, the occurrence of dust allergy is almost always inevitable and its number is rapidly increasing. Dust allergy is usually taking the form of the most common allergic reaction known to and experienced by humans --- asthma. Dust allergy does not exist or is not recognized independently in the medical world. It is usually accompanied by asthma, an allergic reaction that characterized by the narrowing of the airway passage in the human respiratory system.
Why dust allergy is so prevalent
Dust allergy is so prevalent because dusts are everywhere. Dusts are very tiny and miniscule particles consisting of small molecules of soil or other substances. Dusts are easily carried through the air and the wind because of its very light and significantly feather-like weight. It is this attribute of dusts that make it very dangerous and threatening to humans. Because in almost all dry places there are dusts, people are practically living in a world full of dusts. Logically, the situation would not be ideal and optimal for people who have developed an immune resistance to the particles. A very big and significant portion of the population in the United States alone suffer or at least have suffered from dust allergy and dust allergy attacks. Because dust allergies are not diseases, but rather just mere and simple body reflex reaction against dusts that try to get into the body, many people underestimate dust allergy’s potential to pose serious health risk.
Symptoms of dust allergy
Symptoms of dust allergy are very easy to identify and determine. First, because dusts are substances that do not naturally get into the body, the immune system try to block its entry through constricting the air passages, where dusts usually get in. The constricting movement of the air passages make up for the uneasiness to breathe. Thus, asthmatics find it really hard to inhale breathe during asthma attacks. To some very sensitive people, uneasy breathing is also coupled with the development of skin rashes and itchiness around the body. Fever is not a usual symptom to dust allergy, but if a dust allergy occurs and fever appears, there must be something wrong. Fever indicate the presence of pathogens or living organisms trying to invade the body. Hence, fever in dust allergy attacks indicate that complications are present, usually diseases caused by either viruses or bacteria. The occurrence of such fever indicates that proper medical treatment and consultation from a doctor is imperative.
Treatment and prevention of dust allergy
Like any other form of allergies, dust allergy is treated by taking in proper and effective dosages of antihistamines. Antihistamines are especially formulated medicines or drugs that contain chemicals and enzymes in exact amounts to curtail and control onset dust allergy or other allergies. Exposure to dust, the primary proponent and cause of dust allergy , will also be the most basic and most effective treatment. Remember that medications like antihistamines would never be really potent and efficient if exposure to dust is not eliminated or significantly reduced. Dust allergy will also be effectively avoided by reducing exposure to dust. Cleanliness of surroundings and personal hygiene would greatly help to avoid the occurrence of dust allergy.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
For answers to All your frequently asked questions about dust allergy, please go to: http://dust-allergy.allergyanswers.net/ or go to: http://allergyanswers.net/ http://allergyanswers.blogspot.com/
Labels: Dust-allergy