Right Breathing
Sometimes it hurts to breathe. Sometimes it is
hard to breathe. Sometimes it is an ASTHMA attack. This article
is for those who know and those who do not know about ASTHMA.
Wind, cold, pollen, smoke, worries, pressure, food
and more, can be the trigger that sets fire to the lungs and causes the
bronchial tubes (the pipes that carry air to our lungs) to go into
spasm. When that happens, breathing becomes a full time job. Sometimes
it becomes virtually impossible to breathe. Sometimes Asthma kills.
Asthma is not to be braved, ignored or tolerated.
When we are born our lungs are only a third of the
size of our adult lungs. Lungs keep growing until we are nine or twelve.
The number of air sacs in our lungs at maturity ranges from 200 million
to 600 million. The pipes— bronchial tubes and trachea continue to
develop up to age fifteen.
Heredity, illness, and toxins can block healthy
development. The consequence can be ASTHMA. Still, inflammation
and spasm of the large and small air pipes can be improved. Progress to
severe inflammation and spasm and chronic states can be slowed down.
The first rule is to get rid of anything that will
make breathing difficult. Good air conditioning filters pollen and dust.
Plastic liners over mattresses and double casing pillows reduce mite
reactions. Frequent painting of home walls reduces exposure to roach
saliva. Pets can be a real problem. Animal hair and dander, tics, plant
pollen, and dust are all brought to bear when a pet causes a breathing
crisis. Some say daily bathing of the pet can markedly reduce the danger
beloved pets can cause. Others recommend outside pets only, or no pets.
I strongly favor no pets if there is any evidence of a person
with asthma reacting with even mild breathing problems in the presence
of a pet. Many asthmatics smoke or are engulfed in smoke in their own
household. This exposure is catastrophic. These assaults accelerate the
change from nice soft bronchial tubes to thick stiff bronchial tubes.
The tiny hairs that have the job of whuffing out the bad things that get
into the lung become brittle and unable to work. The bronchial tubes get
inflamed, swollen and hurt. Spasm and irritability set in. Coughing,
wheezing, pain and panic result.
Medical help is needed for asthma. Every asthmatic
should have a peak flow meter to monitor how the breathing is each day.
A chart with each meter shows what is normal for each height and weight
and age. For adults, a level at 200 on the peak flow meter indicates
trouble. If the home rescue treatments do not help, a call to the
physician is in order.
If discomfort from asthma occurs more than two
times each week, then each person from the age of four needs to be on
inhaled steroids. Inhaled steroids can block the .5% to 1% lung loss
that occurs each year from untreated asthma. Indeed inhaled steroids
begun within two years of asthma can restore up to eight percent of lung
function. Inhaled steroids after five years can restore up to two
percent of lung function and slow or even halt further bronchial damage.
Leukotriene inhibitors as Accolate and Singulair also quiet inflammation
in the lungs and even help sinuses.
Inhalers, such as albuterol, Proventil, or Maxair
Autohaler, open up the bronchial tubes so that breathing becomes much
less work. Intal can stabilize the cells that make the bronchial tubes
irritated. Sometimes home nebulizer treatment with albuterol is needed
to open up the lungs. But no one should hesitate to seek emergency
treatment when peak flow is 150 or does not rise above two hundred
despite home treatment.
Remember also, treating teeth and stomach problems
reduces asthma.