Archive for the ‘Asthma’

  • For Olympians and Weekend Warriors Alike
    Asthma For Olympians and Weekend Warriors Alike, Winter Sports Can Trigger Asthma Do you cough, wheeze, or get short of breath when you exercise in cold weather? You could have asthma, but you’ve got plenty of company. Exercise-induced asthma is surprisingly common among people who work out in cold climates, whether they’re jogging around the neighborhood or gunning...
    by admin at February 21st, 2010 at 11:02 am
  • Asthma Cure
    Common Asthma Cure The bad news is that there is no asthma cure. The good news is that asthma can be treated with medication supplied by your doctor. There are two main types of asthma medication: anti-inflammatory, and bronchodilators. More details can be found in this website. If your asthma symptom is triggered by environment irritants, your best asthma cure would be...
    by admin at October 21st, 2009 at 06:10 pm
  • Asthma Treatment
    Treating an Acute Attack in the Hospital.  An acute attack may require hospitalization. Laboratory tests, an electrocardiogram (ECG), and a chest x-ray are performed to determine lung function, oxygen levels, and other indications of severity or rule out other causes. Depending on the results, the following treatments may be given: •Beta2-agonists are the standard therapy....
    by admin at October 21st, 2009 at 05:10 pm
  • What Is Asthma Attack?
    What Is an “Asthma Attack”? An asthma attack is a sudden worsening of asthma symptoms caused by the tightening of muscles around your airways (bronchospasm). During the asthma attack, the lining of the airways also becomes swollen or inflamed and thicker mucus — more than normal — is produced. All of these factors — bronchospasm, inflammation,...
    by admin at October 21st, 2009 at 06:10 am
  • Asthma Tests and diagnosis
    Diagnosing asthma involves a thorough medical history, physical exam and lung function tests If you have wheezing, coughing and shortness of breath, your doctor may suspect you have asthma. But these signs and symptoms alone aren’t enough to diagnose asthma because they can also be caused by other conditions. Your doctor will base your diagnosis on a number of things,...
    by admin at October 21st, 2009 at 05:10 am
  • Asthma Risk factors
    There are usually reasons or risk factors that predispose you to asthma and respiratory problems. Asthma does not just happen randomly to anyone without asthma risk factors. Let’s look at some asthma risk factors and see how they increase the chance that a person will have the asthma symptoms of cough, wheezing, and shortness of breath associated with the disease....
    by admin at October 21st, 2009 at 05:10 am
  • Asthma Symptoms
    People with asthma experience symptoms when the airways tighten, inflame, or fill with mucus. Common “asthma symptoms” include: Coughing, especially at night Wheezing Shortness of breath Chest tightness, pain, or pressure Still, not every person with asthma has the same symptoms in the same way. You may not have all of these symptoms, or you may have different...
    by admin at October 21st, 2009 at 04:10 am
  • Adult Asthma
    It used to be that having asthma meant choosing between breathing problems and side effects of asthma medicine (Asthma symptoms vary in severity from occasional mild bouts of breathlessness to daily wheezing that persists despite taking large doses of medication. ). But today’s asthma treatments have freed people from that choice. You can now breathe easier thanks...
    by admin at October 20th, 2009 at 01:10 am
  • What causes asthma?
    Our bodies need oxygen from the air we breath in order for our cells to do their work. Asthma attacks can be very frightening and there is often panic. Although there are varying degrees of the disease, it can be life threatening. When we breath in, air, containing oxygen, enters through the mouth or nose, and descends through the windpipe, to tubes called the bronchi....
    by admin at October 20th, 2009 at 01:10 am
  • What Is Asthma?
    asthma “Asthma” is a lung condition that afflicts 23 million people in the United States, including more than 6 million children. In asthma, the bronchial tubes, the passages that bring air into the lungs, become swollen and inflamed. The swelling can cause coughing, wheezing (a type of breathing characterized by a whistling noise during inhale or exhale),...
    by admin at October 19th, 2009 at 11:10 pm