June-, found this one about allergy shots. You were taking these? Allergy shots are regular injections over a period of time — generally around three to five years — to stop or reduce allergy attacks. Allergy shots are a form of treatment called immunotherapy. Each allergy shot contains a tiny amount of the specific substance or substances that trigger your allergic reactions. These are called allergens. Allergy shots contain just enough allergens to stimulate your immune system — but not enough to cause a full-blown allergic reaction. Over time, your doctor increases the dose of allergens in each of your allergy shots. This helps get your body used to the allergens (desensitization). Your immune system builds up a tolerance to the allergens, causing your allergy symptoms to diminish over time. Most people don't have much trouble with allergy shots. But they contain the substances that cause your allergies — so reactions are possible. Taking an antihistamine medication before getting your allergy shot can reduce the risk of a reaction, particularly a local reaction. Allergy shots are usually injected in the upper arm. Typically shots are given one to three times a week. During the buildup phase, the allergen dose is gradually increased with each shot. The maintenance phase generally continues for three to five years or longer. You'll need maintenance shots about once a month. Allergy symptoms won't stop overnight. They usually improve during the first year of treatment, but the most noticeable improvement often happens during the second year. By the third year, most people are desensitized to the allergens contained in the shots — and no longer have significant allergic reactions to those substances. After a few years of successful treatment, some people don't have significant allergy problems even after allergy shots are stopped. Other people need ongoing shots to keep symptoms under control. Feel free to answer, don't afraid me