ASTHMA INSIGHTS HOME

UNDERSTANDING ASTHMA

Understanding Asthma is a Free comprehensive guide covering asthma's various forms, its symptoms, its management, and its treatments. An essential guide for anyone wanting to understand this growing health concern. Free! Learn more.

INVALUABLE ASTHMA INFORMATION

Yes, There Are Natural Preventative Asthma Treatments
More and more doctors are saying that natural preventative asthma treatments can be one part of managing asthma ...

How To Find Relief From Dust Mite Allergies
Just by following a few simple steps, you can make the interior of your house much less dust mite friendly ...

For More Invaluable Information:
ASTHMA ARTICLES

THE BEST ASTHMA BOOKS

Asthma For Dummies
Asthma For Dummies will help asthma sufferers and their loved ones get a strong handle on managing the disease ...

American Academy of Pediatrics Guide To Your Child's Allergies And Asthma
From the foremost authority on children's health -- a vital guide for parents whose children suffer from allergies and asthma ...

For More Asthma Books:
ASTHMA BOOKS

 

 

The Relationship Between
Asthma And Allergies

 

Rarely do people make the connection between asthma to allergies.

But there can be a direct relationship.

Asthma is a chronic lung condition, characterized by difficulty in breathing. People with asthma have extra sensitive or hyper-responsive airways. During an asthma attack, their airways become irritated and react by narrowing and constructing, causing increased resistance to airflow, and obstructing the flow of the air passages to and from the lungs.

The cause of the inflammation which underlies most asthma conditions in younger sufferers can often be attributed to one or more allergies.

Before we explore that connection further, it's important to understand a little about allergies. 

Allergies are immune system reactions to things that most people would experience as harmless. Certain foods, dust, pollen ... these are allergens that can trigger an allergy attack. When they're encountered, the body's immune system produces IgE antibodies to fight the allergen. These antibodies create the release of chemicals into the bloodstream, one of which (histamine) affects the person's eyes, nose, throat, lungs, and skin, causing the allergy's symptoms.

Allergies are generally grouped by their triggers or their symptoms, hence you'll hear them referred to as food allergies or hay fever or skin allergies, etc.

Allergy rates are dramatically rising, though more people in western countries suffer from allergies, compared to people in less affluent rural parts of the world.

With this foundation in place, now you might find it interesting to note that there is a growing body of evidence that asthma is an environmentally-induced disease.

See the connection?

This creates the potential to prevent asthma by altering your environment, or more to the point ... by removing the allergic cause behind your asthma. This can be particularly successful when the allergy is something that's relatively easy to control. Dust, for instance. Or something that you only encounter in your work environment. Or, though it's certainly much more difficult because of the emotional component, a family pet.

Unfortunately, the most common cause of asthma is an allergy to dust mites. Eliminating these mites to the extent that it might made a difference to your asthma requires a major change in lifestyle and can often be quite expensive. That doesn't mean it can't be done, only that it's not as easy as simply switching jobs.

Of course, new treatments are coming along all the time, and considerable research is currently dedicated to finding ways to modify, abolish or diminish the affect allergies have on the body. With the successful control of allergies can come the successful control of asthma, particularly in younger sufferers. 

  

arrowAt A Glance

  • Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease that makes airways (bronchial tubes) particularly sensitive to irritants, and this is characterized by difficulty in breathing.
  • The cause of the inflammation which underlies most asthma in younger sufferers is one or more allergies.
  • More people in western countries suffer from allergies, compared to people in less affluent rural parts of the world, and allergy rates are on the increase.

 

 

 

                              Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Site Map | Asthma Resources | About Us | Asthma Insights Home
                              Copyright 2005 Asthma Insights