What is exercise-induced asthma?
Asthma is a lung condition that causes wheezing, coughing,
shortness of breath, and chest tightness. Exercise-induced
asthma is a form of asthma that some people have during or
after physical activity.
How does it occur?
In a person with asthma, the small airways of the lungs go
into spasm or constrict. In exercise-induced asthma, this
can occur:
- during or after physical activity and usually when
breathing is hard, heavy, or fast
- when the air is cold
- when the humidity is very low or high
- when there is a lot of air pollution
- when there are a lot of allergens in the air.
What are the symptoms?
The symptoms of exercise-induced asthma include:
- wheezing
- coughing
- shortness of breath
- chest tightness
- fatigue.
How is it diagnosed?
Your healthcare provider will ask about your history of
breathing problems during or after exercise. He or she may
ask you to run on a treadmill or to exercise outside the
office. When you return, your healthcare provider will
then listen to your lungs with a stethoscope to see if you
are wheezing after the exercise.
Your healthcare provider may give you a small device called
a peak-flow meter. This measures how fast you can exhale
air in one breath. During a bout of exercise-induced
asthma, the measurement will decrease from your normal
measurement.
How is it treated?
Exercise-induced asthma can be successfully treated with
medicine. The kind of medicine usually tried first is
an inhaled bronchodilator. Examples of these medicines
are albuterol and pirbuterol. Your healthcare provider
will instruct you to take 2 puffs of this medicine about 15
to 30 minutes before your activity. If your provider tells
you to, you may also use this medicine during your activity
if you get symptoms.
Other medicines that may be tried include cromolyn or
nedocromil. Your healthcare provider will tell you to take
2 puffs about 15 to 30 minutes before your activity to
prevent wheezing. These medicines will not help once you
have started wheezing.
How can I take care of myself?
Know what triggers your asthma. Some people have most
symptoms during strenuous activity in cold, dry air. During
the winter you may need to exercise indoors or wear a
mask when you exercise outside. Wearing a mask warms the
air before you inhale it. Breathing through your nose warms
the air more than mouth breathing and may help prevent
exercised-induced asthma. You may also need to be aware of
conditions such as air pollution or allergens such as dust
or pollen.
Doing warm-up exercises before a vigorous workout may help
prevent an asthma attack.
Many people, including successful athletes, have
exercise-induced asthma. You can remain healthy and physically fit
with proper education and use of medicine.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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