Lifestyle Adjustments to Remedy the Root Cause of Spring Allergies

Traditional Chinese medicine offers a variety of ways to strengthen the body’s ability to keep spring allergies at bay.
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By Jingduan Yang, M.D.
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For many people, spring brings sniffles, congestion, itchy eyes, and fatigue. While conventional allergy medications may provide temporary relief, they rarely address the cause of these symptoms.

By integrating modern nutritional science with traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) and holistic practices, we can uncover the deeper causes of seasonal allergies and adopt lifestyle changes that truly make a difference. This approach is often referred to as “four-dimensional medicine.” It views the body on four key levels: structural, biochemical, energetic, and emotional/spiritual.

Let’s explore how each of these dimensions contributes to spring allergies—and what you can do to rebalance your system naturally.

1. Structural Causes

Allergies aren’t just about what you inhale—they’re about how your body physically responds. Your posture, musculoskeletal alignment, and even breathing mechanics can affect lung capacity and airway sensitivity.

Key Insights

  • Children naturally have narrower airways, making them more reactive to allergens.
  • Adults often experience chronic tension in the upper back and diaphragm due to sedentary work, stress, and poor posture. This tension compresses the lungs and restricts airflow, increasing the likelihood of allergic reactions and asthma.
What you can do:
  • Stretch daily, focusing on the thoracic spine and diaphragm.
  • Practice deep belly breathing to strengthen the diaphragm and promote lung expansion.
  • Take movement breaks every hour while doing desk work to relieve spinal compression.

2. Biochemical Causes

Your body’s internal chemistry affects how your immune system reacts to allergens. Two key areas to address are methylation efficiency and nutritional imbalances.

Support Healthy Methylation

Methylation is a vital biochemical process involved in DNA repair, immune system regulation, and detoxification. Poor methylation may cause histamine buildup, worsening allergy symptoms.
What you can do:
  • Supplement with choline, zinc, and vitamins B9 (folate) and B12.
  • Avoid high-histamine foods, such as aged cheese, red wine, and fermented foods such as sauerkraut and soy sauce.

Address Pyroluria

This often-overlooked condition involves elevated pyrrole compounds in the urine that bind to and deplete vitamin B6 and zinc, weakening the immune system. Symptoms may include chronic allergies or asthma, anxiety or mood swings, poor stress tolerance, pale skin, and dry hair or skin.
What you can do:
  • Supplement with B6, zinc, magnesium, and omega-3s.

Eat Anti-Allergy Superfoods

The right diet can dramatically reduce allergic inflammation and support immune balance.
Nutrients and foods to focus on:
  • Quercetin: A flavonoid in onions and apples, acts as a natural antihistamine
  • Curcumin (turmeric): Potent anti-inflammatory, especially when combined with black pepper to enhance absorption
  • Vitamin C: Boosts white blood cell activity and reduces histamine
  • Selenium: Found in Brazil nuts, supports antioxidant activity
  • Vitamin D: Found in mushrooms and cod liver oil, supports lung health and immune balance
  • Omega-3 Fatty Acids: From fish oil or flaxseed, help reduce systemic inflammation
  • Magnesium: Found in nuts and bananas, relaxes the bronchial tubes

3. Energy and Digestive Health

Traditional Chinese medicine emphasizes that the lungs and large intestine are energetically connected. Modern science echoes this, revealing that the health of your gut microbiome directly affects immune function and allergic responses. A disrupted gut flora can cause immune overreaction to harmless substances such as pollen. Leaky gut and gut inflammation can drive systemic inflammation and worsen allergy symptoms.
What to do:
  • Eat foods with fiber, such as leafy greens, root vegetables, and oats.
  • Include prebiotic and probiotic foods, such as garlic, onions, asparagus, yogurt, kefir, and fermented vegetables.
  • Reduce added sugar, which feeds harmful gut bacteria.
  • Drink plenty of water to support digestion and toxin elimination.
Mechanism studies and clinical trials have shown that dietary fiber has a regulatory effect on the intestines, affecting digestion and absorption, intestinal transit time, and feces formation. In addition, dietary fiber can regulate intestinal microorganisms. This changes the composition of intestinal flora and fermentation metabolites, which affects gastrointestinal health.

From a TCM perspective, people with a cold and damp constitution—often characterized by sluggishness, low energy, and frequent mucus—are more likely to experience coughing and shortness of breath when exposed to chilly air. To support their health, they may benefit from warming foods such as ginger and should avoid raw or cold foods.

On the other hand, those with a hot and dry constitution—often marked by irritability, dry throat, or dry skin—are more prone to heightened allergic reactions. Cooling and hydrating foods such as pears, watermelon, and chrysanthemum tea can help soothe these symptoms and restore balance.

4. Emotional and Spiritual Health

In TCM, the lungs are associated with the emotion of grief. Long-term sadness, loss, or suppressed emotions can weaken “lung qi” (vital energy), increasing susceptibility to asthma and allergies. Chronic emotional stress increases cortisol, which disrupts immune regulation and inflammatory balance. Emotional tension can also lead to shallow breathing, limiting oxygen intake and straining the lungs. This is closely related to our spirit and beliefs and involves our knowledge and understanding of gains and losses in life.
What to do:
  1. Journaling, art therapy, psychological counseling, or meditation help express and sort out your inner feelings. In particular, on a cognitive level, it is essential to understand and release your gains and losses. If we can better understand the relationship between gains and losses from the perspective of spiritual beliefs, it may help our physical health, especially our lungs.
  2. Practice the four-seven-eight breathing technique. Inhale for four seconds, pause your breath for seven seconds, then exhale for eight seconds for several rounds to help release emotional stress.
  3. Aromatherapy, such as the application of lavender and eucalyptus essential oils, is highly effective. It can help soothe one’s mood and improve lung health. Research shows that inhaling essential oils can increase neurogenesis, regulate hormone levels, and activate different brain areas—affecting one’s mood and feelings.
  4. Try meridian massage, acupuncture, and moxibustion. TCM holds that meridians are the channels through which energy circulates in the body, and the internal organs are connected to various parts of the body through those meridians. Some points on the meridians with special functions are called acupoints. Stimulating the acupoints through acupuncture, massage, and moxibustion (a gentle heat therapy with dried mugwort) can treat diseases of the corresponding organs. Studies have found that acupuncture can improve mood changes and lipid metabolism.

Allergy Relief Starts From Within

Rather than relying solely on antihistamines or inhalers, you can address spring allergies holistically by:

• Correcting postural and respiratory patterns • Balancing biochemistry with nutrients and lifestyle • Healing the gut to regulate the immune system • Releasing emotional burdens that affect your lungs

By viewing the body through multiple dimensions—physical, biochemical, energetic, and emotional—you can create lasting improvements in your allergy symptoms and overall vitality.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times. Epoch Health welcomes professional discussion and friendly debate. To submit an opinion piece, please follow these guidelines and submit through our form here.
Jingduan Yang
Jingduan Yang
M.D.
Dr. Jingduan Yang, FAPA, is a board-certified psychiatrist specializing in integrative and traditional Chinese medicine for chronic mental, behavioral, and physical illnesses. Dr. Yang is also the founder and medical director of the Yang Institute of Integrative Medicine and the American Institute of Clinical Acupuncture and the CEO of Northern Medical Center in New York state. He contributed to the books "Integrative Psychiatry," "Medicine Matters," and "Integrative Therapies for Cancer." He also co-authored "Facing East: Ancient Secrets for Beauty+Health for Modern Age" by HarperCollins and "Clinical Acupuncture and Ancient Chinese Medicine" by Oxford Press.