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Gasping for answers
Asthma affects many Australians but it doesn’t have to stop you enjoying life or exercising. Accredited Exercise Therapist Lucie Richards explains.

Volume 48, No. 4, March 23, 2006

You can reduce the chances of exercise-induced asthma with a few precautions, including managing your asthma and using your medication five to ten minutes before you warm up.

You can reduce the chances of exercise-induced asthma with a few precautions, including managing your asthma and using your medication five to ten minutes before you warm up.

Photo by AB Neil Richards

ASTHMA is a chronic disease which can be controlled with proper treatment. Unfortunately it cannot be cured. It affects as many as 1 in 5 children and 1 in 10 adults in Australia.

People with asthma have sensitive or ‘twitchy’ airways (bronchi and bronchioles).

When they are exposed to certain ‘triggers’, the airways become narrowed and this makes breathing difficult.

The main ways the airways become narrow are:

  • The lining inside the airways becomes red and swollen,
  • The muscles around the airways tighten, and
  • Extra mucus may be made.

This makes it difficult for air to pass through the airways into and from the lungs, increasing the effort required to move fresh air containing oxygen in, and the ‘stale’ air containing carbon dioxide out of the body.

What are the symptoms of an asthma attack?

The main symptoms include:

  • Wheezing (noisy breathing when breathing out),
  • Coughing,
  • Chest tightness and/or,
  • Difficulty breathing or shortness of breath.

Asthma symptoms vary from one person to another.

Some people can have all the symptoms while others may only have a cough or wheeze. Symptoms can vary in severity from mild chest tightness to a life-threatening attack of severe breathlessness requiring urgent medical treatment.

What are the triggers for an asthma attack?

Many factors trigger asthma and vary from one person to another. These triggers (apart from exercise) should be avoided. Some of these triggers include:

  • Viral infections (eg cold and flu),
  • Inhaled allergens (eg mould, pollens, animal hair),
  • Sudden changes in air temperature (eg going out in a cold night),
  • Air pollutants (eg cigarette smoke, chemical fumes, paint),
  • Certain medications (eg aspirin, non-steroidal anti-inflammatories),
  • Some food and food additives (eg monosoduim glutamate MSG),
  • Emotional reactions (eg stress,) and
  • Exercise (this can be managed).

What is exercise-induced asthma (EIA)?

Exercise-induced asthma is brought on by the physical exertion of exercising or playing sport. At least 80 per cent of people with asthma have symptoms triggered by vigorous exercise.

During rest we primarily breathe through our nose. The nose warms and moistens the air.

During exercise, the greater need for oxygen means an increase in the breathing rate through the mouth. Air is colder and drier as it’s not warmed and humidified by the nasal passages. Therefore colder and drier air reaches the bronchioles causing water loss and cooling.

It is believed that this cooling and drying effect of the air passages results in an irritant chemical being released by the body, causing the airways to constrict. Asthmatic bronchial tubes are abnormally sensitive to these released chemicals which cause them to narrow.

In most cases, symptoms of EIA tend to be at there worst 3-15 minutes after exercise ceases. This in many instances occurs in the “cooling down” period, rather than during the exercise.

How to prevent EIA

You can reduce the chances of experiencing exercise-induced asthma with a few precautions, including:

  • Make sure your asthma is managed properly on a daily basis,
  • Understand the severity of your asthma and establish an action management plan with your GP,
  • Avoid any known triggers,
  • Use your asthma medication around five to ten minutes before you warm up. Your doctor will advise you on the most suitable medication,
  • Always warm up by lightly moving and stretching for 10 to 15 minutes before you play sport or exercise, and
  • Always cool down.

What exercise is suitable for people with asthma?

Almost all sports are recommended and should be part of a daily management plan. Swimming is a fantastic aerobic exercise for asthmatics and is less likely to trigger a severe asthma attack because the air surrounding water is humid.

Scuba diving is the only sport not advised for asthmatics.

  • For more information contact the Asthma Foundation on 1800 645 130.

Did you know: Anabolic steroids

  • What are anabolic steroids? Drugs derived from testosterone.
  • Are they safe? No. Most present definite risks of permanent liver damage and liver cancer. It is not safe to share needles, and doing so in order to inject anabolic steroids puts you at increased risk of hepatitis B, hepatitis C or HIV/AIDS.
  • Is there a safe dosage? No.
  • Should I tell my doctor if I use anabolic steroids? Yes.
  • Why can’t my doctor prescribe steroids for me? It’s illegal, unless they are to be used for medical reasons.
  • What are some of the side effects? Men: Jaundice, baldness, acne, aggressiveness, development of breast tissue, heart problems, permanent liver damage and tumours, diabetes, high cholesterol, infertility, increased libido. Women: Jaundice, permanent deep voice, facial hair, acne, effects on the unborn child if taken during pregnancy, heart problems, high cholesterol, permanent liver damage, liver tumours, period problems, enlarged clitoris and diabetes.
  • Is there anyone I can talk to about anabolic steroids? Yes. See your doctor who can help you stop using steroids.
  • Is it illegal in the ADF? Yes.

Information sourced from NSW Health Department

 

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