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Allergies & Allergic Reactions: Treatment in Nigeria

Updated July 2026 · Educational information — not a substitute for a doctor or pharmacist

Allergies show up in Nigerian life as sneezing and catarrh from dust and harmattan, itchy eyes, skin rashes and hives, and reactions to foods or drugs. The immune system overreacts to something harmless, releasing histamine — which is why antihistamines are the core treatment.

The practical choice is between older, drowsy antihistamines like chlorpheniramine (Piriton) and promethazine, and newer, non-drowsy ones like cetirizine. For anyone who needs to work, drive, or study, the non-drowsy option is the better daytime default; the sedating ones earn their keep at night when itching keeps you awake.

Skin flare-ups respond well to a short course of hydrocortisone cream on top of an oral antihistamine. What antihistamines cannot handle is a severe, fast reaction with swelling or breathing difficulty — that's an emergency, not a pharmacy visit.

Signs & symptoms

  • Sneezing, runny or blocked nose, itchy throat (worse in harmattan/dust)
  • Itchy, watery, red eyes
  • Hives — raised, itchy wheals that move around the body
  • Itchy rashes or eczema flare-ups
  • Emergency: swelling of lips, tongue, or face; tightness of throat; wheeze or difficulty breathing; collapse — go to hospital immediately

Medicines used for allergies & allergic reactions in Nigeria

Each medicine links to its full guide — uses, dosage forms, current naira prices, and NAFDAC-registered brands. Diagnosis and dosing belong with a clinician or pharmacist.

How it's treated

Match the antihistamine to the situation: cetirizine once daily for daytime control without sedation; chlorpheniramine or promethazine when drowsiness is acceptable or helpful at night. Don't stack multiple antihistamines together without advice.

Find and reduce the trigger where you can — dust, mould, a specific food, or a drug. A reaction to a medicine (e.g. a rash after an antibiotic) should be reported to a clinician and the drug name recorded, so it's avoided in future prescriptions.

See a doctor if…

  • Any swelling of the lips, tongue, or throat, wheezing, or faintness during a reaction — emergency
  • Hives lasting beyond 6 weeks or recurring frequently
  • Suspected drug allergy — before ever taking that medicine again
  • Skin rashes that blister, peel, or involve the mouth/eyes — urgent
  • Allergy symptoms not controlled by a daily antihistamine

Prevention

  • In harmattan/dusty seasons: keep windows down during dust peaks, rinse the face, consider a daily non-drowsy antihistamine
  • Wash bedding regularly and air mattresses — dust mites drive year-round symptoms
  • Note your triggers (foods, drugs, insect stings) and tell every prescriber about drug reactions
  • Keep a sedating antihistamine at home for night-time flare-ups and bites

Frequently asked questions

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Related conditions

This page is educational information about how allergies & allergic reactions is generally managed in Nigeria. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or a prescription. Always consult a licensed clinician or pharmacist, and verify any medicine's NAFDAC registration with our free checker before buying.