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Ask for a short oral steroid course only for severe flares
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What to Do
For severe allergic rhinitis flares that are debilitating despite maximal other therapy, ask your doctor about a short course of oral prednisone (20-40mg/day for 5-7 days). This is a rescue measure, not a regular treatment.
Why It Works
Oral corticosteroids powerfully suppress the entire allergic cascade. They provide dramatic relief within 24-48 hours for severe flares. However, even short courses carry real risks: insomnia, mood changes, appetite increase, blood sugar elevation, and a measurable increase in serious complications.
Tips
- Most allergists limit oral steroids to 1-2 short bursts per year maximum
- Avoid long-acting steroid injections (Kenalog) due to prolonged systemic exposure
- Courses beyond 1 week require tapering to avoid adrenal suppression
- This is a last resort, not a shortcut past daily nasal sprays and antihistamines
📅 Created: 2/7/2026, 9:38:32 PM 📌 commercial 🔧 Prednisone prescription (short course)
Other solutions for When should you see a doctor or allergist for allergies?
- Request a comprehensive allergy evaluation including cross-reactivity
- Be cautious with montelukast (Singulair) — know the black box warning
- Ask about biologic medications for severe refractory allergies
- Rule out structural nasal problems if one-sided congestion persists
- Ask about prescription combination nasal sprays (Dymista, Ryaltris)