Asthma
By Administrator | June 18, 2008
ASTHMA
Asthma is allergic condition as abnormal body reaction toward a substance, such as parasite, dust, animal’s fur, chemical, steam, perfume, certain food or medicine. Microbes in nose and throat also probably affect asthma attack.
When asthma starts from period of childhood, it is commonly caused by food, but when it attacks in the end of childhood period or in the beginning of adolescence period, asthma is generally caused by pollen, dust, chemical substance. If being more than 45 years, asthma is usually affected by infection. Occasionally, the patient with heart attack gets the similar asthma attack, but not real asthma.
The attack more frequently feels if a sufferer is tired or gets large emotion pressure, even the change of climate can probably cause the attack. During great pressure, some of air ducts are clogged by curdle phlegm. It affects difficult breath and high-pitched voice. As a result, air bubbles spread widely and some of their partitions are broken. In dreadful attack, bleeding can also happen to the air bubbles on lungs.
Asthma probably develops gradually during inflammation attack in throat or starts suddenly when the one gets stimulating substance. Firstly, the one has speedy feel in chest. This feel subsides in one-two hours or constantly for hours or days. Finally, the sudden attack loosens curdle phlegm and open air ducts.
To keep fine, the sufferers of asthma must keep calm and don’t express their feel too excessively because it makes them more difficult to breathe. Inhaling aerosol is very useful during the attack of asthma, including they have to avoid from sniffles and cold.
On the other view, PENNASIA Normalization says that asthma happens when lungs can’t function and develop optimally due to enlargement of pleura (wrapping of lungs), so expansion of coming out is handicapped by chest and back and precisely pleura presses internal to lungs, finally the development of lungs can’t be optimal and filling-up of oxygen is less.
This swelling of pleura can come from the decrease of rib elasticity, exactly in major or minor pectoral part, and then it makes the supply of liquid in pleura hampered. Because of this deficiency of liquid, the touch of lungs and pleura in each breath pulling makes bruise and swelling
Another cause is the decreased elasticity of diaphragm limiting chest and stomach and as a major muscle in respiratory process. Therefore, hardening in this part really disturbs expansion to abdomen. Occasionally, the sufferer of asthma also has complaint in his stomach because solar plexus hardens and feels painful when being pressed.
For the chronic sufferer, asthma can make death due to strangulation in neck. The frequent pulling-up of breath affects neck cramped, even when asthma gets a relapse, neck becomes cramped and strangle respiratory duct, and then breathing stops, including the supply of oxygen to brain and the whole body stops. Death comes afterwards due to this condition.
From some cases, asthma cannot be decided in one area, such as only in chest, but also in scapula or stomach. The abnormality between one area and another one has mutual relationship. Asthma can start from disturbance in chest previously, and then affect a relapse of disturbance in stomach.
The sufferers of asthma will get more tortured if they stretch on back because abdominal organ is parallel to chest and then presses lungs down. The hinge of rib in back is also pressed and hard to develop, so pleura surrounding lungs will press more and cause terrible pain. For a good sleep, their position is sitting on the chair and head is put on a pillow on the table. Besides, a bowing head is still useful because it helps lungs do expansion to abdomen when trachea sticks out down and it gives a space for lungs to expand when abdominal organs are centered down.
For prevention of asthma, the one should avoid sneezing or coughing in a long-term, heavy works, hurried conditions, improper food, cold drink, dirty air, cold air, all the time and others.
Taken from Pennasia Normalization
Topics: Asthma |