What is Asthma?
Sutter Children's Services
Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the lung's air passages that can make breathing difficult. There is no cure for asthma and it will not go away, but there are very good treatments to control it. A child with asthma can enjoy a normal healthy life and participate in normal activities.
During normal breathing air moves in and out of the lungs through air passages, bringing oxygen and carbon dioxide in and out of the body. During an asthma attack, or asthma flare up, muscle spasms constrict and tighten the airways and cause the air passages to become narrower, making it harder for air to get in and out. Air flow is also obstructed by inflammation (swelling), which thickens the airway walls and creates mucus and phlegm inside the airways. Both the spasms and the inflammation make it hard to breathe.
Symptoms of an asthma flare up include:
- Wheezing
- Coughing
- Chest tightness that makes it hard to breath
- Waking up at night coughing
- Extra phlegm and mucus
- Frequent visits to your healthcare provider or emergency room and even hospitalization
- Inability to participate in sports and other physical activity
- Missed school days
- Lung damage and, in severe cases, death.
What is Asthma?
Asthma Myths
Asthma Triggers
Asthma Medications
Inhaler Device Training
Managing Your Child's Asthma
AIM: Asthma Information and Management
Asthma is more likely to occur in children who
