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5 Tips for Exercising During Allergy Season

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Spring brings longer days and warmer weather, but also an increase in pollen, challenging outdoor workouts with itching and sniffles. Climate change prolongs and intensifies pollen seasons. Outdoor exercisers inhale higher doses of allergens, impacting performance and recovery. Preventing allergic reactions is crucial, as inflammation impairs healing and sleep. Check out how you can manage it.

Be strategic about when you work out.

When you train outdoors, you can’t avoid allergens entirely, but you can limit the amount by exercising either in the early morning or the early evening, when pollen counts are often lower and moisture can tamp them down.

“During the cooler times of the day, there’s going to be a little bit less pollen production,” said Dr. Pedro Lamothe, an assistant professor at the Emory University School of Medicine who specializes in allergies. For most plants, the higher the temperature climbs, the higher the pollen production.

Another ideal time to exercise is after it rains, since rain cleans the air and forces pollen and other allergens to the ground, he said. Avoid working outdoors on dry, windy days, when more pollen and other allergens circulate in the air.

Take the right medications at the right time.

The most effective way to prevent seasonal allergies from wrecking your workout is to be diligent about taking the right medications before you head outside — and possibly during and after exercise, too.

If you go into a workout with allergic symptoms, “they’re just going to get worse,” Lamothe said. “You’re going to go into a vicious cycle.”

Experts recommend using an over-the-counter corticosteroid spray like Flonase or Nasonex regularly, starting up to two weeks before pollen season. You can also take an oral antihistamine such as Claritin, Zyrtec or Allegra at least an hour before exercising, which will give the medicine time to kick in before you start moving. (Avoid Benadryl, which can make you sleepy.)

For extra protection, Lamothe recommends using an antihistamine nasal spray such as Astepro about 20 minutes before exercising. If you have itchy eyes, you can use antihistamine eyedrops, too.

In the long term, if you know you want to exercise outdoors for years to come, Shah recommended immunotherapy, in which your body is gradually desensitized to allergens through shots or pills.

Check the air quality beforehand.

If your airway is already inflamed, you may be especially sensitive to other air pollutants floating around, such as car exhaust or wildfire smoke, according to David C. Nieman, an exercise scientist and the director of Appalachian State University’s Human Performance Laboratory. “Air pollution makes it all worse,” he said.

If the air quality index rating is higher than 100 (or orange on the scale), you may be better off exercising indoors until it improves.

Wear the right protective gear.

A few key accessories can limit the allergens entering your system, said Dr. Sonya Parashar, an allergist at Cleveland Clinic. For instance, she recommended a brimmed hat or visor and sunglasses to protect your eyes.

If you can endure it, wearing a mask can also reduce the amount of pollen you inhale. N95s are the most effective for filtration, while others are better designed for exercise.

Wash away allergens as soon as you get home.

After your workout, avoid carrying allergens back into your home, Shah said. Leave your shoes at the door, change out of your workout clothes and put them right into the washing machine, if you have one, or a closed bag or hamper.

Next, shower right away, both to wash allergens off your body and to clear them out of your nose and eyes.

“The whole goal is to get them out of your system so they’re not continuously irritating your upper airway for the rest of the day,” Shah said.

As a final precautionary measure, he suggested using a nasal spray or rinse, such as a neti pot or a mist. — NYT