Asthma
By Erika Harvey
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About this ebook
Asthma is a frightening condition for both parents and children. It can lead to enormous restrictions and greatly affect a child’s development physically, emotionally and socially.
But id doesn’t have to. In this concise and helpful handbook, Erika Harvey examines all aspects of living with a child who suffers from asthma. She looks at the treatments available, outlines the practical steps you can take to ease the condition, and – above all – suggests ways to live positively with the condition.
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Asthma - Erika Harvey
Introduction
‘Nicola started off just coughing and wheezing. A cold, we thought. During the night, it got steadily worse and then, very quickly – in minutes – she was choking for breath. She couldn’t talk. She was terribly frightened about what was happening and I couldn’t calm her because I was panicking, too. The journey to casualty was the longest in my life, listening to her gasping attempts to get air. I thought she was going to die in my arms. At the hospital, they knew immediately what it was and what to do. I couldn’t believe it when they told me it was an asthma attack. Nicola didn’t suffer from asthma.’
This is how one mother describes her daughter’s first asthma attack. It happened three years ago when Nicola was seven years old, but her mother still remembers every terrifying detail and the anguished gamut of feelings – the fear, disbelief, desperation and guilt that it might have been something she did or did not do which triggered the attack.
Talking to parents of asthmatic children, one finds that these feelings are common, and none of them forgets the terror of that first attack – particularly if they have had no previous brush with the condition. An asthma attack is a frightening experience for everyone concerned, whether it is the first, second or fiftieth time it has occurred. For the person suffering the attack, it is a gasping, painful struggle to get air into your lungs. Parents of a child going through an asthma attack feel like terrified bystanders, desperate to do something, aware that the need to breathe is paramount but feeling unable to help their child.
It is not always like this; most children suffer from asthma mildly, which means that they only occasionally have symptoms, usually following exposure to a trigger like cold air or exercise. Or they may have low-level symptoms – a cough or wheezing – most of the time, but these tend not to reach the critical level of an actual attack. Asthma is a very changeable beast. It varies in severity from individual to individual and from attack to attack and is brought on by different triggers in different people and at different times. It can develop at any time in susceptible children and they can also grow out of it, mostly as they go into adolescence, although they will always have an ‘asthma tendency’ and it may recur later in life.
If your child has asthma, then he or she is not alone. More and more parents are becoming acquainted with the condition, as it is on the rise worldwide: the number of children diagnosed as asthmatic has doubled since 1970. Figures gathered by the International Study of Asthma and Allergy in Children (ISAAC) show that the USA, Australia, New Zealand and the UK have the highest rates in the world for older children with asthma (the study looked at 14-year-olds), while Canada, Japan, Latin America and Australia have the highest rates for younger children. Australia has the overall highest rate of childhood asthma, with estimates putting it at around 30 per cent. It is estimated to affect around 1.5 million children – one in 7 – in the UK alone.
Epidemiologists and other experts have a wealth of statistical evidence to show that asthma is a growing, worldwide problem; what they do not yet have is a clear reason why it has leapt to pandemic proportions over the last 20 years or so. Part of the reason may be that parents are now more aware of asthma and seek help and treatment earlier; doctors themselves are also diagnosing it more frequently than in the past. In addition, it is possible that other respiratory disorders have now been recategorized as asthma. Beyond this, there is, we know, a definite and long-established genetic susceptibility involved in the development of asthma. If one parent is asthmatic, there is at least a 25 per cent likelihood that a child will develop it; if both parents suffer from asthma, then the chances rise to 50 per cent.
Asthma is also an allergy-related condition and a family history of other atopic problems like eczema, rhinitis or hay fever puts your child at an increased risk of developing asthma – and vice versa: around 40 per cent of children with asthma also have eczema. It seems hard that children already suffering a chronic respiratory condition should also have to put up with the discomfort of eczema, but it fits in with the pattern of oversensitivity that some children experience.
Bearing in mind both the genetic link and the current global rise, it looks as though more children will develop the condition as this generation grows up, become parents in their turn and pass their susceptibility on to their children. Asthma is rapidly becoming a condition which will touch the majority of us at some point in our lives, whether it is as parents or as grandparents.
Breathing is our most basic instinct: breath is life. Asthma stops us taking this instinctual function for granted – it robs us of air and so has the potential to rob us of life, too. Although death from asthma is rare in childhood, it is still fatal for an estimated 30 children in a year. If you live with the nagging worry that some harmless action, exertion or outing may trigger an attack, it is easy to wrap a child in cotton wool and change her life to accommodate the asthma, even though what parents want – and want to work towards – is for their child to live a normal life.
The good news is that, for most children with asthma, it is possible to live a normal life, to do all the things their friends do and feel confident that it will not bring on either symptoms or an attack. This is in a large part thanks to the fact that, although the conventional treatments currently available cannot cure the condition, they can control it very effectively. Complementary therapies also have an important role to play, in boosting the immune system and stimulating the body’s own natural powers to fight the illness. In addition, as we learn more about what triggers asthma, we can root out the culprits and make changes to a child’s environment, diet and lifestyle which minimize the chances of an attack. In this way, parents can make a big difference to their child’s life.
How you can make a difference to your child’s asthma is the main focus of this book. Although it covers all the important medical information, like what happens in the body to cause asthma symptoms, the triggers and the treatments, it also offers you practical ways to alleviate symptoms and feel in control of the condition. In addition, you will find a comprehensive guide to complementary therapies which can help the condition, even in some cases enabling your child to leave off medication altogether once the complementary treatment shows results.
The book also covers the emotional side of having a child with asthma in the family: what problems he is likely to come across and how you can beat them in a positive, united way; the effects of stress and how to put it into perspective; and, of course, advice on letting your child become more independent as he grows older.
Asthma is certainly not a life sentence. Given all the options, your child can enjoy life to the full. All you need is a willingness to make changes in your life to help her, an open mind towards treatment, both conventional and complementary, a positive attitude, and a rock-solid determination that asthma will not rule the roost in your home!
Note. To avoid clumsy constructions, the pronouns ‘he’ and ‘she’ are used in alternate chapters when the sex of the child is indeterminate, and should be taken to indicate both genders.
Chapter One
What is Asthma?
Asthma is basically an inflammatory condition of the lungs, where the airways swell up, the muscles around them contract and air is prevented from getting through to those parts of the lungs responsible for feeding oxygen into the bloodstream. The severity of the problem depends on how closed the airways become. A mild attack may cause coughing and some breathlessness; in a very severe attack, levels of oxygen in the blood can become so low that a child loses consciousness, although this is very rare. This inflammation develops because the body is hypersensitive to something in the environment which would normally have no effect. It could be due to an allergic reaction to a substance known as an allergen or an oversensitive response to environmental conditions like air pollution or cold air, or it could be brought on by exercise or an infection like a cold.
This sensitized reaction to a trigger causes three distinct symptoms to develop:
• The lining of the airways becomes inflamed and swollen, so they are narrower than normal.
• The muscles around the airways go into spasm (known as bronchospasm or bronchoconstriction), which narrows the airways even more.
• Quantities of thick, sticky mucus is produced in response to the inflammation and this effectively plugs up the airways.
■ ESTABLISHED TRIGGERS
The root cause of this bronchial chain reaction – that is, what sets up the sensitivity in the first place – has still not been clearly established, although science has got as far as tracking down a possible asthma gene. In the future, this could help in the development of a cure while providing a way to test people to find out if they are at risk.
What is becoming clearer is the extent to which the immune system is involved in the development of asthma. It appears to misfire in some way; it mistakes a normally harmless substance (like pollens or pet dander) for something harmful and develops antibodies – the body’s defence against dangerous intruders like bacteria and viruses – against it. It is this malfunction in our defensive mechanism which lies at the root of all allergy-related conditions and which causes the symptoms of asthma to develop.
The 20th century does seem to be putting the immune system under pressure: generally, there has been a rise in allergy-related conditions, from asthma, eczema and hay fever to inflammatory bowel disorders and coeliac disease (where a person is intolerant of the gluten in wheat). In addition, although the genetic link is strong, an increasing number of people are developing an allergy-related condition when there is no family history of allergies. For this reason, researchers are now looking beyond genetics to pinpoint possible triggers in our environment.
In what follows, you will find the well-established triggers for asthma, while the next section looks at some new ones, for which evidence is still accumulating but which appear to show a link. If you are going to put into practice the steps covered in more detail in chapter 2, then you will need to think closely about what triggers your child is susceptible to, to narrow down the field