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Find what's driving your symptoms.

Browse 30+ allergy, asthma, and immune conditions explained in plain language. Find yours, learn what works, then start an intake to get matched with a personalized plan.

Showing 35 of 35 conditions

Nasal Allergies

Allergic Rhinitis

Inflammation of the nose triggered by allergens like pollen, dust, or pet dander. Causes sneezing, runny nose, congestion, and itchy eyes — often year-round or in specific seasons.

SneezingRunny noseCongestion+2
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Nasal Conditions

Non-Allergic Rhinitis

Stuffy or runny nose not caused by allergies — usually triggered by irritants, weather changes, fumes, or strong odors. Feels like allergies but allergy tests come back negative.

CongestionWeather sensitivityIrritant triggers+2
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Sinus Conditions

Sinusitis

Inflammation of the sinuses causing facial pressure, congestion, headaches, and thick nasal discharge. Can be short-term (after a cold) or chronic (12+ weeks), often overlapping with allergies.

Facial pressureHeadachesCongestion+2
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Sinus Conditions

Nasal Polyps

Soft, painless growths inside the nose and sinuses that block airflow, dull your sense of smell, and worsen congestion. Often linked to asthma, allergies, or aspirin sensitivity.

Loss of smellPersistent congestionAsthma link+2
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Asthma & Breathing

Asthma

A chronic lung condition that causes airways to narrow, swell, and produce extra mucus — leading to wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness, and coughing. Treatable with the right plan.

WheezingShortness of breathChest tightness+2
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Asthma & Breathing

Allergic Asthma

Asthma symptoms triggered by allergens — pollen, dust mites, pet dander, or mold. Identifying your specific triggers means we can stop attacks before they start, not just treat them.

Allergy triggersWheezingAllergy testing+2
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Asthma & Breathing

Exercise-Induced Asthma

Wheezing, coughing, or shortness of breath that hits during or after exercise. With the right pre-workout plan, most patients can stay fully active without symptoms.

Exercise triggeredCold air sensitivityPre-workout treatment+1
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Asthma & Breathing

Occupational Asthma

Asthma caused or worsened by something at your workplace — chemicals, dust, fumes, or animal proteins. Symptoms often improve on weekends and worsen during the work week.

Work-triggeredChemical exposureWorkplace assessment+1
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Skin & Hives

Acute Urticaria

Sudden outbreak of itchy, raised welts lasting less than 6 weeks. Usually triggered by infection, food, medication, or insect bite. Most cases resolve, but severe reactions need immediate care.

Itchy weltsSudden onsetFood & med triggers+1
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Skin & Hives

Chronic Urticaria

Recurring hives that last 6+ weeks with no clear trigger. Disruptive to sleep and daily life — but very treatable with the right combination of antihistamines and biologics like Xolair.

Hives 6+ weeksSevere itchingXolair & biologics+2
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Food Allergies

Food Allergy

An immune reaction to a specific food — peanuts, tree nuts, milk, eggs, shellfish, wheat, or soy — that can range from mild itching to life-threatening anaphylaxis. Testing identifies your triggers; treatment includes avoidance, emergency plans, and oral immunotherapy.

Peanut & tree nutAnaphylaxisEpiPen+2
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Food Allergies

Food Intolerance

Digestive trouble after eating certain foods — bloating, gas, cramps, diarrhea — but no immune reaction. Often caused by lactose, gluten sensitivity, FODMAPs, or food additives. Different from a true allergy.

BloatingLactose intoleranceNot life-threatening+1
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Drug & Medication Reactions

Drug Allergy

An immune reaction to a medication — antibiotics, NSAIDs, contrast dyes — causing rash, hives, swelling, or anaphylaxis. Testing can confirm or rule out the allergy so you're not unnecessarily avoiding meds you might actually need.

Antibiotic reactionsSkin rashDrug challenge+1
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Drug & Medication Reactions

Penicillin Allergy

Most patients labeled 'penicillin-allergic' aren't actually allergic anymore. Our testing protocol confirms or removes the label, opening up safer, more effective antibiotic options.

Often outgrownAllergy delabelingSafer antibiotics+1
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Severe Reactions

Anaphylaxis

A life-threatening allergic reaction that affects breathing, blood pressure, and multiple body systems. Requires immediate epinephrine and emergency care. We help you build a clear action plan and carry the right meds.

EmergencyEpiPen trainingAction plan+1
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Eosinophilic Disorders

Eosinophilic Esophagitis

A chronic allergic condition where white blood cells (eosinophils) build up in the esophagus, causing trouble swallowing, food getting stuck, and chest pain. Often linked to food allergies.

Trouble swallowingFood impactionChest pain+2
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Skin Conditions

Eczema

Dry, itchy, inflamed skin that often flares with stress, weather, or specific triggers. Common in children but persists into adulthood. The right combination of moisturizers, topical therapy, and trigger identification can keep skin calm long-term.

Dry & itchy skinFlare-upsChildhood & adult+1
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Skin Conditions

Atopic Dermatitis

Moderate to severe eczema that doesn't respond to basic moisturizers. New biologics like Dupixent and JAK inhibitors have transformed outcomes — most patients see dramatic improvement within months.

Moderate-to-severeDupixent & biologicsJAK inhibitors+1
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Skin Conditions

Contact Dermatitis

Itchy rash where your skin touched something it reacted to — nickel jewelry, fragrances, cosmetics, latex, poison ivy. Patch testing pinpoints exactly what you're reacting to so you can avoid it.

Skin rashPatch testingNickel & fragrance+1
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Mast Cell Conditions

Mast Cell Disorders

A group of conditions where mast cells release too much histamine, causing flushing, hives, GI symptoms, and reactions to triggers like heat, exercise, or stress. Requires specialist evaluation.

FlushingMulti-system symptomsSpecialist evaluation+1
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Nasal Allergies

Seasonal Allergies (Hay Fever)

Sneezing, congestion, runny nose, and itchy eyes that hit during specific times of year — tree pollen in spring, grass in summer, ragweed in fall. Testing identifies your exact triggers.

Spring tree pollenSummer grassFall ragweed+2
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Indoor & Outdoor Allergies

Environmental Allergies

Allergic reactions to airborne allergens — pollen, mold, dust mites, pet dander — that you encounter at home or outside. Year-round symptoms suggest indoor triggers; seasonal flares point to outdoors.

Indoor & outdoorYear-round symptomsMultiple triggers+1
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Indoor & Outdoor Allergies

Pet Allergy

Sneezing, congestion, or rashes triggered by exposure to cats, dogs, or other animals — caused by their dander, saliva, or urine proteins. You don't have to give up your pet to find relief.

Cat & dog danderKeep your petImmunotherapy+1
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Indoor & Outdoor Allergies

Dust Mite Allergy

Year-round congestion, sneezing, or asthma symptoms triggered by microscopic mites living in bedding, carpets, and upholstery. Bedroom changes plus immunotherapy can dramatically reduce symptoms.

Year-round symptomsBedroom triggersMattress covers+1
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Indoor & Outdoor Allergies

Mold Allergy

Sneezing, congestion, or asthma triggered by mold spores — found in damp basements, bathrooms, and outdoor leaf piles. Severity often spikes in humid weather and after rain.

Indoor moldOutdoor sporesHumid weather+1
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Indoor & Outdoor Allergies

Pollen Allergy

Reactions to tree, grass, or weed pollen — the most common cause of seasonal allergies. Your symptoms tell us which pollens you're sensitive to; testing confirms it.

Tree pollenGrass pollenRagweed+2
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Eye Allergies

Allergic Conjunctivitis

Itchy, red, watery eyes caused by allergens like pollen, dust, or pet dander. Often comes with nasal allergy symptoms. Eye drops, oral meds, and allergy immunotherapy provide real relief.

Itchy eyesRed & wateryEye drops+1
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Contact & Drug Reactions

Latex Allergy

Reactions to natural rubber latex found in gloves, balloons, condoms, and some medical devices — ranging from itchy skin to anaphylaxis. Important for healthcare workers and patients alike.

Healthcare workersMedical settingsCross-reactive foods+1
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Severe Reactions

Insect Sting Allergy

Severe reactions to bee, wasp, hornet, or fire ant stings — beyond normal pain and swelling. Venom immunotherapy is 95-98% effective at preventing future anaphylaxis and can be life-saving.

Bee & wasp stingsAnaphylaxis riskVenom immunotherapy+1
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Food Allergies

Oral Allergy Syndrome

Itching or tingling in your mouth after eating certain raw fruits or vegetables — caused by cross-reactivity with pollen proteins (e.g., apples with birch pollen). Cooking the food usually solves it.

Mouth itchingRaw fruits & veggiesPollen cross-reactivity+1
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Education & Diagnosis

Allergy vs Cold

How to tell whether you have allergies or a cold — both cause sneezing and congestion, but differences in duration, fever, and symptom pattern reveal which one and how to treat it.

Symptom comparisonDuration mattersWhen to see a doctor
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Cough & Throat

Chronic Cough (Allergy-Related)

Persistent cough lasting 8+ weeks often points to allergies, post-nasal drip, asthma, or acid reflux — not a lingering cold. Identifying the right cause is the key to actually stopping it.

8+ weeksPost-nasal dripAsthma cough+1
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Nasal Allergies

Postnasal Drip

The feeling of mucus dripping down the back of your throat — often causing chronic cough, throat clearing, and hoarseness. Usually a symptom of allergies, sinusitis, or non-allergic rhinitis.

Throat clearingMucus drainageChronic cough+1
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Severe Reactions

Angioedema

Sudden swelling deep under the skin — usually around the eyes, lips, hands, or genitals. Can be hereditary, drug-induced, or part of an allergic reaction. Throat swelling is an emergency.

Sudden swellingEmergency signsHereditary types+1
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Immunology

Immune System Disorders (Educational)

An overview of how the immune system works and what happens when it malfunctions — including primary immunodeficiencies and autoimmune conditions. Important for patients with recurrent infections.

Recurrent infectionsPrimary immunodeficiencyAutoimmune overview+1
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