Tendulkar S, Venkatesan P, Mysore S, Lakshmi R V. J Allergy Clin Immunol Glob. 2026 Feb 17;5(3):100674. doi: 10.1016/j.jacig.2026.100674.
Abstract
Background
Chronic allergic rhinitis (CAR) is a highly prevalent condition characterized by nasal symptoms and mouth breathing. The detrimental effects of frequent pharmacologic treatment necessitate a nonpharmacologic treatment approach for patients with CAR.
Objective
We sought to assess the feasibility, acceptability, safety, and preliminary effects of a nasal rehabilitation program in patients with CAR.
Methods
A pilot study was conducted with 35 patients who underwent a nasal rehabilitation program for 5 weeks. The feasibility of the intervention from patient and therapist perspectives, adherence to the treatment, and occurrence of adverse events was recorded posttreatment. The preliminary effects of the treatment on nasal and mouth-breathing symptoms and disease-specific quality of life were assessed at baseline and after 5 weeks of treatment.
Results
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| Effect of 5 weeks of nasal rehabilitation treatment. A, Amount of change (mean ± SD) in TNSS, NOSE, and RQLQ outcomes. B, Amount of change (mean ± SD) in subdomains of RQLQ outcome. |









