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ASTHMA. By: LR. Definition. Inflammatory disorder of the airways leading to the lungs Long term lung disease that causes airways to inflame, close and fill with mucus, making breathing difficult
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ASTHMA By: LR
Definition • Inflammatory disorder of the airways leading to the lungs • Long term lung disease that causes airways to inflame, close and fill with mucus, making breathing difficult • There are 4 different levels of asthma, mild intermittent, mild persistent, moderate persistent, or severe persistent
History • “asthma” is a Greek term • Not a recent condition • Evidence shows that this condition was around during the ancient Egyptian times • Best clinical description of asthma in the earliest book was in the 1st century AD
Causes • Exact cause of asthma is not known • Genetic and environmental factors are theories to what causes asthma such as: • Inherited tendency to develop allergies • Parents with asthma • Infections from childhood
The Airways • People with asthma have inflamed airways • Airways are like tubes that carry air in and out of your lungs, your main airway is the trachea which branches into other smaller airways the bronchioles • Inflamed airways are swollen and very sensitive • Muscles around the airways tighten during an attack, causing less air flow into the lungs
Warning signs before an attack • Allergic itching • A loud cough • Dizziness or lightheaded feeling • When symptoms get more intense it is an asthma attack
Symptoms • Everyone's asthma is different!! • Therefore asthma patients all have different symptoms. • The most common symptoms are: • Wheezing • Chronic cough • Shortness of breath • Tight chest
Other symptoms include: • Pallor- pail skin tone • Sweating • Restless Sleep • Fast Breathing • Increased mucus production • Fatigue
Triggers • Allergens • Irritants • Additives • Strong Smells • Drugs • Exercise • Emotions • Weather
Treatment • There is no cure! • Differs for asthma patients depending on the severeness of their symptoms • Many long term medications such as pills, and puffers. • With today’s knowledge and treatments most people can manage this disease
Comparison between asthma patient that has taken treatment and that has not taken treatment
Diagnosis • Can be difficult to diagnose • Doctors diagnose by: • Family history • Patients medical history • Physical examination • Symptoms • Results from tests/assessments • Can be miss diagnosed as a bad cold
Prognosis • Children tend to outgrow this disease • Adults diagnosed with asthma have much harsher symptoms than children
Future • Number of children under the age of 5 diagnosed with asthma has risen 160% from 1980 – 2006 • New discoveries in medical research field are increasing the medications
STATISTICS • Approximately 300 000 000 people worldwide experiencing asthma symptoms • 8% of adults and 13% of children suffer from asthma symptoms. • In the U.S alone there are 5000 deaths a year from asthma
Facts! • Among children more boys have asthma than girls • Among adults asthma is 35% higher among women than men • Asthma death rates are also higher among women • Asthma cannot be cured! • Affects people of all ages • Most often starts during childhood • Proof that asthma is becoming more common • Most common chronic illness
Bibliography • Berger, W (2008) Living with Asthma. New York, New York: Facts on File • Frey, R (2009) U.X.L Encyclopedia of Diseases and Disorders New York, New York. Gale Cengage Learning. (Volume 1) • Health-Care-Information (2011) Asthma Statistics Worldwide. Retrieved November 7 2011 from http://www.health-care-information.org/diseases/asthma/ • Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America (2011) Asthma- A Disease of Antiquity Retrieved November 7, 2011, from http://www.aafa-ca.org/asthma_history.php • National Heart Lung and Blood Institute People Science Health. (2011). What Is Asthma? Retrieved November 10, 2011, from http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/health-topics/topics/asthma/
Picture Citations • http://kidshealth.org/teen/diseases_conditions/allergies_immune/headers_85831/T_Allergies_1.jpg • http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_70HgxsVpUTo/SBEeBIwSPeI/AAAAAAAAAH4/Ss-1ZuEB6To/s400/asthma2.jpg • http://www.chelationtherapyonline.com/anatomy/images/picpg3.gif • http://www.csn-deutschland.de/blog/en/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/Coughing.jpg • http://www.heartfailurematters.org/PublishingImages/shortnessofbreath.jpg • http://www.clipartoday.com/_thumbs/014/Restless_l_tnb.png • http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-CoBAEUEaESM/TfrNqm0rMpI/AAAAAAAAAVI/D29e_Fq9T10/s1600/infoaday.blogspot.com+%25281%2529.jpg • http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a4/Misc_pollen.jpg/250px-Misc_pollen.jpg
More Picture Citations • http://image.yaymicro.com/rz_1210x1210/0/6ed/young-person-running-outdoors-6ed785.jpg • http://www.veryicon.com/icon/png/Object/Super%20Vista%20Medical/asthma%20inhaler.png • http://smartasthmatips.com/wp-content/uploads/medium_433425_893429.jpg • http://www.asthmameds.ca/images/lungsbig.jpg • http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ab/Physical_examination.jpg • http://www.stamfordallergy.com/images/asthma-s16-man-inhaler.jpg • http://www.doh.state.fl.us/Environment/programs/Environmental_Public_Health_Tracking/image012.gif • http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/39874000/gif/_39874805_world_asthma3_map416.gif • http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/82-625-x/2010001/article/11098-02-eng.gif