Asthma is a respiratory disease in which the airways of the lungs
may be obstructed because of the mucus that may fill up your chest. As a
result, a patient of bronchial asthma may suffer from shortness of the breath.
It is believed to be caused by the increased resistance of the air in the
respiratory tract of the body. This may not only hamper the exchange of gases
(CO2 and O2) but may also lead to the swelling up of the bronchial walls,
asthma attacks, spasms of the bronchial asthma, regular coughing, etc. In order
to get rid of the mucus that may long be clogging your lungs, the coughs may be
supported with the secretion of mucus.
Such type of asthma is usually intrinsic and may occur because of
certain allergies in patients. Be it children or the adults, there are certain
allergies that later become the triggers of the asthma attack. This allergy may
not be the key symptom of asthma but just may be one important trigger that
makes you prone to the attacks. Some of these allergies that cause attacks of asthma in children
and adults include smoke, dust, mold, pollens and dander.
So, what can be your asthma cure? There has
to be something that has to provide you relief every time you experience the
symptoms of asthma. The cure depends largely on what symptoms you experience.
You have to tell the expert about the symptoms you are experiencing and based
on these symptoms, they’ll prescribe the medications or the treatment plan. The
treatment plan prescribed to you may completely be different from the treatment
plan given to other patients.
The symptoms of bronchial asthma usually occur because of the
infections found in the respiratory tract of the lungs. These can be because of
the allergies to foods and drugs, smoke or the pollutants that may be present in
the air. Further excessive exercising or the cold air outside, can also lead to
allergies in asthma patients.
Some prominent symptoms of bronchial asthma
include breathlessness, tightening of the bronchial muscles, swelling up of the
air passages causing troubled breathing, etc. Swelling or the inflammation of
the air passages may reduce the amount of the air that reaches the lungs. This
will further reduce the oxygen flowing from the lungs to the other cells of the
body. As a result of this, patient may begin to get tired with small activities
like dressing up, walking few steps and climbing the stairs. Lastly, bronchial
asthma may also increase the production of the mucus that may then fill up your
chest.
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