Stop treating the stuffy nose casually.
A simple, shareable plan: buy the right basics, run the routine every day for 4–6 weeks, then escalate to ENT/allergy testing if it still doesn’t break.
What to buy
- NeilMed Sinus Rinse bottle + saline packets. Use distilled or previously boiled/cooled water.
- Flonase Sensimist or Nasacort. One daily nasal steroid. Pick one, use consistently.
- Distilled water for rinses. Do not use straight tap water.
- Dust mite mattress encasement and pillow encasements.
- Bedroom HEPA purifier: Coway Airmega, Levoit Core 400S/600S, Austin Air, or IQAir.
- Aranet4 or Airthings monitor for humidity/CO₂. Target bedroom humidity: 40–50%.
- Optional after 2–3 weeks: ask doctor about azelastine or Dymista if still congested.
Every night
- Rinse
Use saline rinse to clear allergens, mucus, irritants. Lean over sink. Don’t blast aggressively. - Wait 5–10 minutes
Let the nose drain so the spray can reach tissue instead of mucus. - Nasal steroid
Aim outward toward the ear, not up the middle/septum. Don’t snort hard. - Bedroom air
HEPA purifier on. Bedding clean. Humidity 40–50%. - Track one number
AM stuffiness score 1–10. If it’s not improving by week 4–6, escalate.
The nasal spray technique
1. Look slightly down
Don’t tilt your head way back. You want nasal lining coverage, not throat drip.
2. Cross hands
Right hand sprays left nostril. Left hand sprays right nostril. This naturally angles outward.
3. Aim toward the ear
Avoid spraying the septum. Septum hits cause irritation/bleeds and worse adherence.
Coach note: if you “tried Flonase” but used it randomly or aimed it wrong, you have not actually run the experiment.
Environmental controls
- Wash sheets weekly; hot wash when possible.
- Replace old pillows or encase them.
- Vacuum with HEPA filtration.
- Reduce rugs/clutter/dust traps in bedroom.
- Keep pets out of bed/bedroom if symptoms are bad.
- Use MERV 13 HVAC filter if system can handle it.
- Investigate musty smell or humidity spikes — mold can keep symptoms lit up.
Do not do this
- Don’t live on Afrin/oxymetazoline. Max 2–3 days unless a clinician specifically guides you. Rebound congestion is real.
- Don’t make oral antihistamines the whole plan. They help itch/sneeze more than true blockage.
- Don’t rely on Sudafed long-term. Can raise BP/HR and hurt sleep.
- Don’t buy weird sinus gadgets first. Nail the boring evidence-based routine before toys.
If still blocked after 4–6 weeks
| Who | Ask for | Why |
|---|---|---|
| ENT | Nasal endoscopy; evaluation for deviated septum, enlarged turbinates, nasal valve collapse, polyps, chronic sinusitis. | If structure or polyps are the issue, OTC meds won’t fully fix it. |
| Allergist | Skin or blood IgE testing for dust mite, mold, pollen, cat/dog, regional allergens. | Identifies triggers and opens the door to immunotherapy. |
| Primary care / ENT / allergist | Discuss azelastine, Dymista, ipratropium if drip is prominent, or other prescription options. | Nasal antihistamines can be much more useful than another oral pill. |
Don’t self-manage these
Get medical evaluation promptly if congestion is one-sided and progressive, there’s bleeding, severe facial pain/swelling, fever with worsening symptoms, vision changes, recurrent infections, major smell loss, or symptoms after facial trauma.
Track this
| Metric | Morning | Night | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stuffy nose 1–10 | __ | __ | 10 = fully blocked |
| Mouth breathing? | Y / N | Y / N | Especially sleep/wake |
| Rinse done? | — | Y / N | Consistency wins |
| Steroid spray done? | Y / N | Y / N | Use at same time daily |