Tags: Leads, Nasal Blockage
Tags: Leads, Nasal Blockage
This entry was posted on Sunday, July 30th, 2006 at 6:16 am and is filed under Allergies. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.
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Deviated Septum. Trauma, broken nose.
If you’re referring to allergic reaction… first, the allergen (pollen, dander, smoke, etc.) enters your nose. Your nose perceives the allergen as a threat and takes steps to attack it. It does this by triggering the production of mucous, which is intended to flush the allergens out of the nasal cavity. The result is a runny or stuffy nose.
Nose has cilia or hair lining within the walls and when any foreign body enters it, most often the cilia trys to get rid of it but at times these surpass the cilia and then enter the system thus causing sneezing, or sudden blockage of the nose. Mucous/the fluid (cold) is a result of an air borne virus called rhino virus which we easily get into contact through dust, polluted air etc. For a normal individual, a blocked nose gets off in a couple of days but for people with a nasal septum deviation, it takes a pretty longer time. Sorry if my anwer was too long for u to read.
We all have little bones and passages in our skull. They’re all unique. You might have a bit of swollen tissue in a narrow area.
Try a saline nasal RINSE (not a spray) A full warm water saline rinse goes in one nostril and out the other. It draws out all the gunk and shrinks the tissue (like swimming in the ocean). I’ve been doing it at work too.
The buffered salt doesn’t ‘sting’ as much as plain salt water. You can use a new method like Nasopure, or the vintage, Netipot. The special bottle and salt is about $20.
You can do this a often as you like with no bad side effects.
You don’t need a prescription for this therapy. So if you live in a state like mine, they’ve pretty much “outlawed” sudafed medicine. Drug-free is really the way to go on a frequent-use basis. (I put in a link for “what” and “how” – there’s also some good info on wiki)