Understanding Asthma
Description
Most people would recognise asthma in a child or adult as attacks of wheezy breathelssness, somtimes on exertion, somtimes at rest, somtimes mild, sometimes severe. Some would recognise specific 'triggers' - for example animals, fumes, pollens,. Some might think of asthma as a condition of children, some as a condition able to affect somone of any age. Some would regard occasional nuisance requiring intermittent treatment. Surely they all can't be right? - in a way they can, although it is this wide range of factors involved in asthma that makes it difficult to come up with a simple definition.
Contents
- What is asthma
- How much asthma is there?
- Causes and triggers of asthma
- Symptoms and diagnosis
- Prevention and self-help
- Drugs used in the treatment of asthma
- The managment of asthma
- Asthma in elderly people
- Special forms of asthma
- Occupational asthma
- Complementary treatments
- The future
- Questions and answers
- Useful addresses
- Index
- Your pages
About the author
Professor Jon Ayres - after an honorary appointment as Professor of Respiratory Mdeicine at Birmingham Heartlands Hospital, the author is now Professor of Environmental and Occupationsl Medicine in the University of Aberdeen. He has a special interest in asthma and the effects of air pollution on the lungs.









