From the Ohio Valley to the Pacific Northwest, shifting weather patterns are set to trigger aggressive, early-season pollen surges.
A cold end to winter, combined with a surge of March warmth, has allowed for many trees to pollinate at the same time.
A warm, windy Wednesday triggered an early-season surge in tree pollen across the Triangle. The culprit? The trees. Other WRAL Top Stories According to Wednesday morning’s pollen report, four types of ...
"If you think pollen allergies are getting worse, you're not wrong," experts say.
Tree pollen — that springtime scourge that coats cars in yellow dust and sends allergy sufferers running to the pharmacy — typically abates by late May in upstate New York. But this spring’s bloom is ...
Aleksandr Karelin was the "Russian Bear," one of the most ferocious Olympians to ever live. Akira Maeda was a retired ...
Specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) testing of more than 23 million samples revealed that rates of sensitization to tree pollen varied significantly by tree species; male patients and urban residents had ...
Spring is here, and so is allergy season. Well, to be fair, pollen in the Deep South is kind of like the threat of tornadoes. It might be worse in the spring or fall, but the risk is with us all year.