Treatments

Care for allergic rhinitis in Naraina, Delhi

An unhurried, individual consultation for recurring morning sneezing, a runny or blocked nose, itchy eyes, and the dust, pollen or pollution-season patterns around them.

Dr. Yashasvi Verma · MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra

Does this nasal pattern feel familiar?

  • Morning sneezing spells

    The day begins with one sneeze after another, often before you have properly left the bed.

  • A nose that blocks at night

    One or both sides feel shut when you lie down, and you wake with a dry mouth or heavy head.

  • Clear, watery running

    Tissues stay close because the nose keeps dripping even though you do not feel feverish.

  • Itchy nose and palate

    The itch sits inside the nose or high in the mouth, and rubbing seems to make the morning harder.

  • Smog-season nose and throat irritation

    On smoky or high-dust days, the nose stings, blocks or runs, and the throat can feel scratchy.

  • A drip at the back of the throat

    The nose may not run forward, but you keep swallowing, clearing the throat or waking with irritation.

How care is individualised here

Start with the pattern.

Morning or night, clear or blocked, indoors or outside — the first visit maps when the nose and eyes react, what was around you, and what you already use.

Bring the whole nasal history.

Previous ENT notes, allergy tests, sprays and tablets sit beside the day-to-day details: sleep, throat irritation, season changes and the small triggers you have begun to notice.

One prescription, reviewed against your notes.

Dr. Verma individualises the homeopathic prescription after the consultation, then uses follow-ups to compare the pattern recorded at the first visit.

Alongside the care you already have.

Keep prescribed medicines under the direction of the clinician who prescribed them. Bring the full list so Dr. Verma can see the complete picture.

Dr. Yashasvi Verma seated on a rock overlooking a cloudy mountain valley

Your first visit

  1. 1

    An unhurried first consultation

    45–60 minutes

    The first visit is a detailed conversation about your health story, not a quick prescription.

  2. 2

    A remedy chosen for you

    Dr. Verma studies your case as a whole and selects an individualised remedy.

  3. 3

    Follow-up and review

    Progress is reviewed at follow-up visits and the plan is adjusted to how you respond.

Dr. Yashasvi Verma standing in a dark suit at an indoor event

Your doctor

Dr. Yashasvi Verma

MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra

With allergic rhinitis, the small details matter: the first ten minutes after waking, the room where the nose blocks, whether the eyes itch, and what happens around dust or a season change. I use that timeline, together with your reports and current medicines, to understand the individual pattern before I prescribe.

More about Dr. Verma

Booking for someone else?

Bring their current sprays or tablets, any ENT or allergy-test reports, and a short note of when the sneezing or blockage is most noticeable.

Bring the full medicine list and any previous nose or allergy reports. A few notes on night-time blockage, morning symptoms and known exposures help keep the first visit focused.

Questions about allergic rhinitis

Why do I sneeze so much in the morning?

Morning worsening is a common allergic-rhinitis pattern. Overnight exposure, the room environment, posture and the nose's own day-night rhythm can all matter, so the first visit looks at timing rather than assuming one trigger.

How can I tell a recurring nasal-allergy pattern from a cold?

Repeated sneezing, itching, clear wateriness and a familiar dust or season pattern can point toward allergic rhinitis, while fever, coloured discharge or marked facial pain need a medical assessment. A clinician should confirm the diagnosis rather than relying on symptoms alone.

Can Delhi pollution make the nose and eyes feel worse?

Polluted or smoky air can irritate the nose and is associated with worse rhinitis symptoms, but that does not make pollution the specific allergen in every case. The consultation records pollution days alongside pollen, dust and indoor patterns.

Can I continue my antihistamine or nasal spray?

Bring the name and dose of every tablet, spray and other medicine you use. Do not stop or reduce a prescribed medicine on your own; any change stays with the clinician who prescribed it. Dr. Verma needs the complete list at the first visit.

Do I need an allergy test?

Not everyone needs the same tests. ENT or allergy clinicians may use skin-prick or specific-IgE testing when the diagnosis is uncertain or identifying a particular allergen would change the plan. Bring any previous results to the consultation.

What should I bring to the first visit?

Bring current tablets and sprays, previous ENT notes or allergy-test results, and a short record of when symptoms appear — morning or night, indoors or outside, clear or blocked, and whether the eyes or throat join in.

What ages can consult for allergic rhinitis?

Patients aged 18 and over consult independently. Anyone under 18 is seen with a parent or guardian present; the parent or guardian gives the history and consents to the consultation.

Are online consultations available?

Yes. The clinic offers online consultations.

Visit details

Clinic hours
Mon · Wed · Fri — 11 am – 2 pm
Tue · Thu · Sat — 11 am – 2 pm & 6 pm – 9 pm
Sun — Closed

Near Naraina Vihar Metro Station

Ready when you are

No preparation needed — just bring your story and any current prescriptions.

Sudden swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, faintness, or symptoms that become severe very quickly need emergency care — call 112 / 108. Persistent one-sided blockage, repeated nosebleeds, fever or marked facial pain should be assessed by an ENT or medical doctor.