Asthma Allergy Medicine | Breathe Freely with Personalized Treatment

AllergyWorx provides physician-supervised allergy care that targets the root cause of allergic asthma, not just the wheezing and shortness of breath.

Our personalized immunotherapy helps train your immune system to tolerate allergens that trigger asthma symptoms, bringing lasting relief and better respiratory control.

Many patients experience noticeable relief quickly sometimes within the first few weeks while others reach full improvement within 3–6 months of consistent treatment.

Physician-Led Treatment Plans

FDA-Registered Allergen Extracts

Safe for Ages 2+

Allergic Asthma Symptoms & Breathing Difficulties

How It Works

Getting started with AllergyWorx is simple, just three steps to start breathing easier.

Quick Online Screening

Answer a few questions about your allergic asthma symptoms and medical history. It only takes a few minutes.

Get Tested at a Local Lab

Visit a nearby testing center to identify the specific allergens triggering your asthma such as dust mites, pollen, pet dander, or mold.

Personalized Treatment at Home or In-Clinic

Receive custom AllergyDrops or supervised Allergy Shots tailored to your results helping your immune system build natural tolerance over time.

Understanding Allergic Asthma & Respiratory Triggers

Allergic asthma, also called allergy-induced asthma, is the most common type of asthma affecting approximately 60-90% of people with asthma. In allergic asthma, exposure to allergens triggers an immune response that causes inflammation and narrowing of the airways, leading to asthma symptoms like wheezing, coughing, shortness of breath, and chest tightness.

Unlike non-allergic asthma triggered by exercise, cold air, or stress, allergic asthma is specifically caused by inhaled allergens. When you're exposed to your trigger allergens, your immune system overreacts, releasing chemicals that cause airway inflammation and bronchospasm.

Identifying and treating the underlying allergies through immunotherapy can significantly reduce asthma symptoms, decrease the need for rescue inhalers and controller medications, and improve overall respiratory health.

Common Triggers

Typical Symptoms

When untreated, allergic asthma can lead to frequent asthma attacks, emergency room visits, poor sleep quality, reduced physical activity, and long-term airway damage.

AllergyWorx helps you identify your triggers and treat them at their source.

How Immunotherapy Treats Allergic Asthma

AllergyWorx offers proven immunotherapy that builds tolerance to asthma-triggering allergens and provides lasting relief.

Custom AllergyDrops:

Easy, daily treatment taken at home

Allergy Shots:

Supervised injections for stronger allergic responses

Gradual Desensitization:

Most patients complete treatment in 3–5 years

Reduced Dependence:

Fewer rescue inhalers and controller medications needed over time

Allergen extracts are sourced from FDA-registered suppliers and compounded under physician supervision.

Note: Immunotherapy for allergic asthma works best when combined with asthma medications as directed by your physician. Continue using your prescribed asthma medications unless your doctor advises otherwise.

Lifestyle & Prevention Tips for Allergic Asthma

Use HEPA air purifiers

In bedrooms and main living areas to filter out allergens continuously.

Wash bedding weekly

In hot water (130°F or higher) to kill dust mites.

Keep indoor humidity below 50%

Using dehumidifiers dust mites and mold cannot thrive in dry environments.

Remove carpets from bedrooms

When possible hard flooring is easier to clean and harbors fewer allergens.

Vacuum regularly

With a HEPA-filtered vacuum to capture allergens without redistributing them.

Keep pets out of bedrooms

To minimize dander exposure while sleeping.

Monitor pollen counts

And stay indoors during high-allergen days when possible.

Use allergen-proof mattress and pillow covers

To create a barrier against dust mites.

Take prescribed asthma medications

As directed immunotherapy complements but doesn't replace asthma treatment.

Create an asthma action plan

With your physician and share it with family members.

Pro Tip

Pro Tip

Keep a symptom diary tracking when asthma symptoms worsen. This helps identify specific allergen triggers and seasonal patterns, allowing you to take preventive measures before exposure.

Success Stories

*Individual results may vary. Always consult your physician before starting any treatment.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between asthma and allergic asthma?

Asthma is a chronic lung condition causing airway inflammation and breathing difficulties. Allergic asthma specifically means asthma symptoms are triggered or worsened by allergens like pollen, dust mites, pet dander, or mold this accounts for about 60-80% of asthma cases. People with allergic asthma experience wheezing, shortness of breath, and chest tightness when exposed to their specific allergens. Non-allergic asthma is triggered by exercise, cold air, stress, or respiratory infections rather than allergens. Identifying whether your asthma is allergic helps guide the most effective treatment.

Yes, allergen exposure is one of the most common asthma attack triggers for people with allergic asthma. When allergens like pollen or dust mites enter your airways, they cause inflammation and mucus production, making airways narrow and breathing difficult. This can happen immediately after exposure or develop over several hours. Controlling underlying allergies through immunotherapy, avoiding allergens, and taking controller medications significantly reduces asthma attack frequency and severity. Many patients find their asthma improves dramatically when allergies are properly treated.

The best approach combines asthma controller medications (inhaled corticosteroids) with allergy-specific treatment. Daily controller inhalers prevent airway inflammation. Immunotherapy targeting your specific allergens (pollen, dust, pets) treats the root cause and can reduce both allergy and asthma symptoms. Studies show immunotherapy reduces asthma medication needs by 40-60% and can prevent asthma development in children with allergic rhinitis. Avoiding triggers, using air purifiers, and having a rescue inhaler for flare-ups complete a comprehensive treatment plan.

While there’s no complete ‘cure’ for asthma, allergic asthma can be controlled so well that symptoms rarely occur. Immunotherapy is the closest thing to a cure it can significantly reduce or eliminate both allergy and asthma symptoms for years after treatment ends. Many patients, especially children who start immunotherapy early, experience long-term remission where they no longer need daily asthma medications. The goal is achieving complete symptom control and preventing asthma from limiting your activities or causing emergency situations.

Yes, asthma inhalers are essential for allergic asthma. Controller inhalers (inhaled corticosteroids like Flovent or combination inhalers like Advair) are taken daily to prevent inflammation and should be used consistently, even when you feel fine. Rescue inhalers (albuterol) provide quick relief during asthma attacks or breathing difficulties. However, inhalers only treat asthma symptoms, not the underlying allergies. Combining inhalers with immunotherapy to address allergic triggers provides the most comprehensive treatment and often reduces the need for daily inhaler use.

Ready to Control Your Allergic Asthma at the Source?

Start your personalized treatment today safe, effective, and designed for lasting results.

No more constant wheezing or relying on rescue inhalers. Just lasting, physician-supervised care that addresses why allergens trigger your asthma.