Can allergic rhinitis be completely treated surgically?

  Because allergic rhinitis is a difficult disease to treat, friends who have it will seek medical help everywhere during the onset of the disease, always hoping to find a complete cure. Smart friends will be screened for propaganda that some can be cured, and those who are dizzy may test it immediately with fever. In my opinion, surgery is not advocated for allergic rhinitis. You’d better get tested for allergens, and for those who don’t have it, at least go to a hospital outpatient clinic for endoscopy and CT to see if there are any abnormalities in the nasal anatomy, etc., such as deviated septum, enlarged turbinates, nasal polyps, etc. If any of these conditions are present (one of them is sufficient), surgery may be considered at this time and may have therapeutic implications for your allergic rhinitis. It is true that there are friends who have not had a recurrence of allergic rhinitis after surgery, but they are only a minority.