Parents usually notice the obvious symptoms first: sneezing, blocked nose, runny nose, nose rubbing, itchy eyes or mouth breathing. What is easier to miss is the wider pattern — poor sleep, tired mornings, school focus problems, cough after lying down, snoring, exercise cough, frequent reliever use or asthma that keeps flaring despite inhalers.

Red flags first
Not every blocked nose is simple allergy.
  • Breathing distress, chest indrawing, blue lips, drowsiness, exhaustion or low oxygen needs urgent in-person care.
  • Swelling of lips, tongue or face, widespread hives with breathing symptoms, vomiting with collapse, or faintness can be an allergy emergency.
  • One-sided foul-smelling nasal discharge, a possible foreign body, repeated nosebleeds, severe headache, facial swelling, eye swelling or visual symptoms needs medical review.
  • Regular loud snoring, pauses, gasping, restless sleep, morning headaches or daytime sleepiness should not be dismissed as “just blocked nose.”
  • Do not use video consultation as the first step for acute breathing distress, severe wheeze, facial swelling with breathing symptoms, low oxygen or a child who looks seriously unwell.
Rechecked nose-lung pattern board
Allergic rhinitis care works best when parents connect nose symptoms, sleep, triggers, technique, asthma control and medicine safety.
सह
The nose and lungs often behave like one airway.

Blocked nose, mouth breathing and allergy triggers can influence sleep quality, cough, exercise symptoms and asthma control.

01
Not an emergency planSwelling, severe wheeze, drowsiness or breathing distress needs urgent care.
02
Pattern firstSeasonal, year-round, school, sleep and home patterns guide the next step.
03
Triggers matterDust, pollen, pets, mold, smoke, dampness and pollution may worsen symptoms.
04
Technique mattersNasal spray direction and consistency can change both benefit and side effects.
05
Sleep cluesMouth breathing, snoring, pauses and restless sleep deserve careful review.
06
Asthma controlPersistent nose symptoms can make asthma feel harder to control.

A safer allergy plan starts with what parents actually see at home, not with a long list of medicines.

Check 01
Is it seasonal or year-round?

Seasonal sneezing and itchy eyes may suggest pollen. Year-round blocked nose may involve dust mites, dampness, mold, pets, smoke, pollution or non-allergic causes.

Check 02
Is sleep being affected?

Mouth breathing, snoring, restless sleep, dry mouth or tired mornings show that the nose problem is affecting daily life.

Check 03
Are the lungs also reacting?

Cough, wheeze, exercise symptoms, night waking, frequent reliever use or attacks mean asthma control, inhaler technique and the written action plan should be reviewed.

Check 04
Is nasal spray being used correctly?

Benefit is reduced if the spray is aimed at the middle wall, sniffed hard into the throat or used only occasionally when a regular plan was prescribed.

Check 05
Are medicines causing problems?

Sleepiness, nosebleeds, bad taste, throat dripping, behaviour changes, mood changes or repeated decongestant use should be discussed rather than ignored.

Parent tip: Before review, write down: season, triggers, sleep, snoring, mouth breathing, eye symptoms, cough or wheeze, reliever use, attacks, current medicines, nasal spray technique, inhaler technique, side effects and whether asthma control has changed.

Original parent-guide visual by Together We Breathe · © 2026. Designed to explain nose-allergy patterns for families. It does not replace examination, allergy testing, prescribing, asthma action planning or emergency care.

What allergic rhinitis is — and what it is not.

Allergic rhinitis happens when the lining of the nose reacts to allergens such as dust mites, pollen, mold, animal dander or cockroach particles. It can cause sneezing, blocked nose, runny nose, itchy nose, itchy eyes, throat clearing, post-nasal drip and mouth breathing.

Use the ARIA-style pattern: duration and impact.

A practical review separates occasional symptoms from persistent symptoms, and mild symptoms from symptoms that disturb the child’s life.

Symptoms parents may observe.

Nose symptoms

Sneezing, blocked nose, runny nose, itchy nose, upward nose rubbing, sniffing, snorting, throat clearing and post-nasal drip can suggest rhinitis.

Eye symptoms

Itchy, watery or red eyes often point toward allergy, especially when symptoms occur with pollen, dust, animals, dampness or seasonal changes.

Sleep symptoms

Mouth breathing, snoring, restless sleep, dry mouth, tired mornings or daytime sleepiness mean the nose problem is affecting daily life.

Asthma clues

Night cough, exercise cough, wheeze, frequent reliever use or attacks may mean the upper and lower airway need review together.

Trigger pattern

Dusting, bedding, pets, damp rooms, pollen days, smoke, incense, pollution or school environments can give useful clues.

Red flags

One-sided foul discharge, bleeding, severe headache, eye swelling, facial swelling, visual symptoms or a very unwell child should not be labelled simple allergy.

Why GINA 2026 asthma review should include the nose.

A child with asthma symptoms should not be reviewed only through the inhaler prescription. GINA-style asthma care looks at current control and future risk, including triggers, comorbidities, inhaler technique, adherence and the written action plan. Allergic rhinitis is one of the common nose-lung problems that can make asthma feel harder to control.

How allergic rhinitis may be evaluated.

Treatment choices need matching.

Technique matters
A nasal spray can fail simply because it is used badly.

Parents should be shown technique with the actual bottle. In general, the child looks slightly down, the nozzle is aimed gently outward toward the outer side of the nostril, away from the middle wall of the nose, and the child breathes gently rather than sniffing hard into the throat. Nosebleeds, bad taste, throat dripping or poor response may mean technique needs review.

Montelukast: the caution parents should not miss.

Montelukast may appear in allergy and asthma prescriptions, but it is not a harmless “simple allergy tablet.” For allergic rhinitis, it should usually be reserved for children who are not helped by, or cannot tolerate, other suitable allergy treatments. Parents should be counselled about possible mood, behaviour, sleep or mental-health changes and should know when to contact the clinician urgently.

What not to do blindly.

Medical trust note
How this page was rechecked.

This parent guide is written in simple language and reviewed for clinical safety by Dr. Antar Patel. The wording was re-evaluated against the GINA 2026 asthma strategy, ARIA-EAACI 2024–2025 allergic rhinitis guidance, pediatric intranasal-treatment evidence, pediatric rhinitis guidance, montelukast safety warnings and emergency-first pediatric safety principles. It avoids copied copyrighted figures, does not provide dosing, and is for education only.

Frequently asked questions.

01Can allergic rhinitis make asthma worse?
Yes. Nose allergy and asthma often travel together. Blocked nose, mouth breathing, poor sleep and shared allergy triggers can make cough, exercise symptoms and asthma control worse.
02Are nasal steroid sprays safe for children?
They are commonly used when prescribed for the right child and used correctly. Parents should not change dose, frequency or duration without clinician review.
03Why does nasal spray technique matter?
Technique affects benefit and side effects. Spraying toward the middle wall of the nose or sniffing hard into the throat can cause irritation, bad taste or nosebleeds.
04Does my child need allergy testing?
Testing is most useful when the result will change the plan, such as targeted avoidance, immunotherapy discussion or clarifying difficult symptoms. A positive test must match the child’s history.
05Can rhinitis cause snoring?
A blocked nose can contribute to mouth breathing and snoring. Loud regular snoring, pauses, gasping, morning headaches or daytime sleepiness should be assessed.
06Is montelukast a first-choice allergy medicine?
No. It should not be used casually for mild allergic rhinitis. It needs clinician discussion, especially about sleep, mood and behaviour warning signs.
07When should blocked nose be reviewed urgently?
Urgent review is needed for breathing distress, swelling of lips or tongue, severe wheeze, drowsiness, one-sided foul discharge, repeated nosebleeds, severe headache, eye swelling, facial swelling, visual symptoms or a very unwell child.

Related guides.

Triggers
Common asthma triggers what to track

Dust, smoke, pollen, pets, exercise and viral colds can all affect asthma patterns.

Control
Asthma control is it working?

Night cough, reliever use, activity and attacks show whether control needs review.

Technique
Spacer and mask technique small details matter

Inhaler delivery should be checked before changing medicines blindly.

Sleep
Snoring and sleep breathing what to notice

Mouth breathing, snoring, pauses and daytime sleepiness deserve review.

Medicine safety
Montelukast in children what parents should know

Use, limits and mood or sleep warning signs should be discussed clearly.

Safety
Emergency breathing signs when to go now

Breathing distress, blue lips, drowsiness and low oxygen should not wait online.

→ See also
Allergy testing in children

When skin prick or specific IgE tests actually help.