For people with asthma, it is important for them to be aware of
the high expectations that should be expected from appropriate control of asthma.
If they are having symptoms that interfere with sleep or activity, cause urgent
care requirements or hospitalization, or having side effects from medication,
they should discuss this with their doctor and consider seeking an additional
medical opinion can help from an asthma specialist if they are not already seeing
one.
We are here to talk tonight about asthma. First, I want to talk
about what asthma is, what is likely to happen if you have asthma, and what can
be done about it. Asthma is extremely common. In fact, it is the most common
cause of hospitalization of children, the major cause of missed school, and a
major cause of visits to emergency rooms. There is a paradox regarding the
management of asthma. Better medication than ever is available and there is
greater potential to manage asthma effectively then ever before. But the
statistics tell us the outcome overall is not improving. There is a great
contrast in the outcome of asthma when treated in selected specialty programs as
a general outcome in the community. My perception of the problem with asthma
today is that it is a problem of health care delivery. Essentially appropriate
medical decisions are either not made by the physician or not carried out by the
patient.
What is it in pollen that activates such severe allergies?
Pollen has various proteins on its surface structure to which
people make allergic type antibodies.
Is it common for people with allergies to suffer allergy-induced asthma?
I get it from allergic reaction to animals, but not from sports or running.
Yes. You can get asthma from allergies. That is quite common.
Can you explain what happens to the lungs that cause this problem?
When an airborne allergen is inhaled and gets down into the lungs
of someone who has the airway sensitivity that we call asthma, it sets up an
allergic reaction on the surface of the airway that results in the release of
various chemical substances that causes constriction of muscle around the airway
and also inflammation with swelling of the lining of the airway and secretion of
mucous.
What are the best inhalers and can a primary care physician prescribe
them or does it need to be done by a specialist?
A primary care physician can prescribe anything that a specialist
can prescribe. The only difference is that a specialist may know more about the
various alternatives. With regard to what are the best inhalers, this requires
information about what the inhaler is used for. There are inhalers used as an
acute intervention measure to relieve symptoms when they are present, and there
are different medications in inhalers that are used in maintenance medication to
decrease the frequency of symptoms and prevent the need for the intervention
measures as much as possible. To answer the question, I would want to know which
type of medication, intervention or maintenance, the questioner is asking about.
Does the environment play a large role in asthma? Does all the smog
increase numbers of patients, or is it not related?
The environment plays a role in asthma for many patients, but
this may vary considerably from one patient to another. Some patients with asthma
have allergies to environmental factors that cause a major problem in their
asthma, and others do not. Non-allergic factors that make asthma worse include
exposure to cigarette smoke and, in some patients, strong odors or irritating
fumes. The information on smog is not absolutely clear. It probably increases
asthma for at least some if not many patients. But some of the same environmental
factors that cause smog such as an inversion layer, not only increases smog, but
also keeps airborne allergens close to the ground, and that increases their
concentration in the air.
How do I deal with this season and these ALLERGIES???
That is not a question I can readily answer in this format. That
would require ideally an allergy evaluation and prescriptions of appropriate
medication. A competent allergist can identify the allergic factors that are
causing a problem and should be able to prescribe medication or recommendations
that will provide control of your symptoms.
What can be done to "cure" asthma? Or can one expect to live with it and
treat it?
There is no known cure for asthma. However, asthma should almost
always be manageable. By manageable it should meet specific criteria control.
Control of asthma means the absence of urgent visits to the doctor or emergency
rooms or the hospital; the absence of symptoms that interfere with sleep or
activity including athletics; the lack of need for intervention measures with an
inhaler broncodilator; use of oral corticosteroids within defined limits; the
absence of any side effects from medication; and the lack of need of routine
medication more often than twice daily.
How does asthma develop in children?
Children who develop asthma have inherited a genetic
predisposition to have the disease. The genetics of asthma are complex and not
fully understood. There is also a relationship between the genetics and the
environment that influences the development of asthma although the nature of this
interaction is not well understood.
What are the pros and cons of inhaled steroids?
The major pros of inhaled steroids are its effectiveness and
relative safety in usual doses as a maintenance medication for controlling
chronic asthma. The con of inhaled steroids is that it does not consistently
control all chronic asthma at usual doses, and there are some potential adverse
effects that can occur at higher doses. Also, as effective as inhaled
corticosteroids are, they do not reliably prevent acute exacerbations from viral
respiratory infections (common colds) which are the major triggers for asthma
that result in urgent care requirements and hospitalization, especially in
children.
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