DiseasesAsthma and Airway Hyperresponsiveness
Asthma and Airway Hyperresponsiveness
Image: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
   
  5 to 10% of the spanish population suffers asthma and the figure is growing.
  What is asthma?
 

Asthma is a chronic diseases where the airways or bronchial tubes are inflamed and therefore are blocked.

This obstruction is variable: from mild crisis resolving spontaneously up to severe attacks requiring hospital admission.

The frequency of these flare-ups or attacks is also very variable: from one or twice a year up to a daily basis (mainly patients allergic to plant or tree pollen during the blooming season).

Asthma Symptoms

Cough: mainly a "dry cough" (no mucus), intermittent or in flare-ups, both during the day or at night.

Wheezing or whistling sound in your chest: produced by air passing through an obstructed airway. It can be so suttle that can ben not noticed.

Shortness of breath: usually in a progressive way. It can be very severe but most ashmatics do not notice it. It is not essential for the diagnose of bronchial asthma.

Secretions ("mucus"): generally accompaning the cough and leading to nausea or vomiting in children.

Just one type of ashtma?
 
Can I be asthmatic?


It is one of the most frequent worlwide chronic disease: some 300 milllion suffer it, and its incidence is growing in most countries, especially in children and young adults.
Starts normally (but not only) in childhood or adolescence, and some may get better during puberty. Nonetheless, half of the asmathics still continue suffering it in when they are adults.

80% of asthmatics have allergic background

Causes of asthma

Allergy is the single most frequent cause of asthma. House dust mites, plant and tree pollen, and animal dander are outstanding sensitizations.

An ashtma patient can worsen when exposed totriggers:
enviromental pollution: tobacco smoke, chemical agents (sprays, perfumes, petrol, paint).
Emotions: laughing, crying or anxiety crisis can alter the respiratory rythm and trigger an asthma attack.
some drugs: non-steroideal antiinflamatory (aspirin and some pain killers) and beta-blockers.
other triggers: exercise, cold enviroment, humidity, infections, gastric reflux, etc.




More info

Biologic therapies: the future to come

Respiratory infections role in asthma