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Return to IndexStep 1: Taking Control of Your AsthmaStep 2: What is Asthma?Step 3: Know the SignsStep 4: How Asthma Is DiagnosedStep 5: The Levels of SeverityStep 6: Determine Your Goals and ExpectationsStep 7: Asthma DrugsStep 8: Drug Delivery DevicesStep 9: Understand Your Action PlanStep 10: Make "Peak Flow" a Habit!Step 11: Avoid Asthma TriggersStep 12: Visit Your Doctor RegularlyKey PointsGlossary *Close Menu* Return to IndexStep 1: Taking Control of Your AsthmaStep 2: What is Asthma?Step 3: Know the SignsStep 4: How Asthma Is DiagnosedStep 5: The Levels of SeverityStep 6: Determine Your Goals and ExpectationsStep 7: Asthma DrugsStep 8: Drug Delivery DevicesStep 9: Understand Your Action PlanStep 10: Make "Peak Flow" a Habit!Step 11: Avoid Asthma TriggersStep 12: Visit Your Doctor RegularlyKey PointsGlossary *Close Menu*
Asthma is a chronic, inflammatory disorder of the airways. A person with asthma may not feel symptoms all the time. But when an "asthma episode" (also called an asthma attack) occurs, it becomes hard for air to pass through the airways. The result is breathing difficulties, wheezing, coughing, or other symptoms. ![]() To understand asthma, it is helpful to understand how air moves in and out of the lungs:
What causes asthma symptoms? Classic asthma symptoms, such as difficulty breathing, wheezing, chest tightness, and coughing, happen when the airways become narrow and blocked. Three things happen during an asthma episode:
People with asthma have very sensitive airways that are constantly on the verge of over-reacting to asthma triggers. It doesn't take much for the airways to become inflamed, constricted, and filled with fluid. ![]() NormalInflammationConstrictionMucus build-up
What triggers asthma? Asthma can be triggered by just about all of the same things that trigger allergies. It also can be triggered by cold air, exercise, and other factors. Possible asthma triggers include:
A key step in controlling asthma is to identify which of these triggers make your asthma worse, and then work to eliminate or avoid them. Sometimes it takes exposure to more than one of these factors before an asthma episode is triggered. While you can't control some things, like cold viruses, you can avoid being around others who are sick. Take common-sense approaches and manage what you can.
Review Date:
May 25, 2005 Reviewed By: Alan Greene, M.D., F.A.A.P., Department of Pediatrics, Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford University School of Medicine; Chief Medical Officer, A.D.A.M., Inc., and Jacqueline A. Hart, M.D., Department of Internal Medicine, Newton-Wellesley Hospital, Boston, Ma. The information provided herein should not be used during any medical emergency or for the diagnosis or treatment of any medical condition. A licensed medical professional should be consulted for diagnosis and treatment of any and all medical conditions. Call 911 for all medical emergencies. Links to other sites are provided for information only -- they do not constitute endorsements of those other sites. © 1997-
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