Can allergic rhinitis be cured?

       Except for lifelong immunity against diseases such as smallpox and measles, it can be said that no disease can be treated once for life. Please do not blindly pursue a cure, which is a typical advertising scam to seduce patients who are eager for a cure. For allergic rhinitis (allergic rhinitis) if treated properly, it can be completely and quickly well controlled, although it may also recur under certain conditions, but continued treatment is effective.  It is important to establish the idea that long-term control equals cure, rather than pursuing short-term eradication. The point is that at present many people are reluctant or do not know how to carry out formal treatment under the misleading influence of unscrupulous medical advertisements. It is recommended to consult more with doctors in regular hospitals and learn authentic medical knowledge.  For example, if you are allergic to a certain plant in the north, you will not be allergic if you go to the south, or if you are allergic to shrimp, you will not be allergic if you avoid eating shrimp food.  If you can’t get rid of allergens, you can use the internationally accepted nasal spray hormone and or a new generation of nasal spray or systemic antihistamine drugs to treat the effect is also relatively certain, such as hay fever and other seasonal rhinitis only half a month before the arrival of spring and autumn to effectively control the occurrence of symptoms, time, economic costs are not high.  Of course, if the patient’s economic situation and time are more abundant, the use of specific desensitization therapy may obtain a more long-term effective treatment.  Several points should be noted in the choice of treatment: antibiotics (so-called anti-inflammatory drugs) should be applied only when combined with bacterial infections and are not effective for conventional allergic rhinitis; decongestants (nasal ventilation drugs) should be used only for short-term control when severe nasal obstruction is present, and nasal drops are prohibited; fake herbal medicines are not effective; paracetamol and cold medicines are effective but have side effects and are not recommended for use.  Some laser and so-called plasma nasal surgery only destroy the mucosa of the nasal cavity for short-term relief of symptoms, but the long-term efficacy is very low and ineffective for conventional allergic rhinitis; sieve anterior nerve and pterygoid nerve severance require high surgical equipment and experience and are difficult.