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Asthma Basics for Kids
Stuff you
really need to know to take care of your asthma.
Just
the facts
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With
your doctor or asthma counselor and parents, make an Asthma
Action Plan that fits your life.
-
Know
your triggers and avoid them
-
Take
your asthma medicines at the right times, and take the right
amount
-
Keep your quick-relief
inhaler with you, and use it when you need it. There is a
law in Michigan that allows students to carry their asthma
inhalers with
them as long as they have permission from their doctor and
parent. Click
here
to learn about that law.
-
Watch
for early warning signs of an asthma attack, and get help if you
need it.
What is
Asthma?
Asthma is
a lifelong, or chronic, lung disease that makes your lungs
“twitchy,” or more sensitive, than other people’s.
Asthma is with you every day, even if you don’t have
symptoms. Sensitive airways can react to different things, called
triggers. Once your
asthma is “triggered,” the airways get inflamed or swollen,
and the muscles around the airways tighten, making breathing hard.
Is
Asthma a Serious Disease?
Asthma is
a serious disease, and can kill if it is not treated the right
way. When it is treated right, people with asthma can live normal,
active lives.
What
are the Symptoms of Asthma?
There are
early warning signs that can sometimes clue you in that an asthma
attack is coming. Click here to see if you can spot yours.
Not all
people with asthma have the same symptoms. The most common
symptoms of asthma are:
- Shortness
of breath, or chest “tightness”
- Wheezing
- Cough
lasting more than a week, or that happens during the night or
after exercise
- When
you have a cold, it lasts for more than 10 days, and goes into
your chest
Who
Gets Asthma?
Anyone can
get asthma, at any age. Sometimes it starts as a baby, other times
it starts later in childhood or in the teen years.
Although some kids seem to “outgrow” asthma, the
symptoms can return years later. Some people start having asthma
symptoms after a bad cold or flu.
What is
an Asthma Attack?
An asthma
attack is a time when you have more or worse asthma symptoms. The
symptoms can be mild or
severe. Anyone can have a severe attack,
even a person with mild asthma. The attack can start slow or fast.
Sometimes a mild attack will seem to go away, but will come
back a few hours later. This second attack may be much worse than
the first. Severe asthma symptoms mean a severe attack – if you
have severe symptoms, take your rescue medication or call the
doctor or 911 right away.
When
you are having an asthma attack you feel like you can’t breathe,
and it’s pretty scary! That
is because, during an asthma attack the lining of the airways in
the lungs swells. The airways make a thick mucus.
The muscles around the airways tighten and make the airways
narrower. All of these changes in the lungs block the flow of air,
making it hard to breathe. Knowing what
is happening in the lungs during an asthma attack will help
you to know why it often takes more than one medicine to keep your
asthma under control.
What
should you do during an asthma attack?
Follow
your Asthma Action Plan! Having a plan written down that tells you how to handle any
asthma symptoms can be a big help and will make you feel like you
can handle your asthma. If you don’t have an Asthma Action Plan,
tell your parents about it and GET ONE!
Along with following the
Asthma Action
Plan, here are some
other helpful hints:
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Stay calm, try to relax. It isn’t easy! But the more you
panic, the worse your breathing will get.
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Tell any adult. If there aren’t any adults around tell
another kid to tell an adult. Whoever is around – teacher,
coach, parent, will be able to help you, or get you help, if you
need it. Don’t try to tough it out alone!
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Take the quick-relief medication as your Asthma Action Plan
tells you to. Not sure which medication is the quick-relief one?
Ask your parents, doctor, asthma counselor, or pharmacist about it
before you need it in an emergency!
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If the quick-relief medicine hasn’t helped in 5-10
minutes, call the doctor or 911.
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Keep taking the quick-relief medicine every 5-10 minutes
until the ambulance arrives.
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Never change how much or which of
your asthma medications you take unless your doctor has written it
in your Asthma Action Plan or told you to do so over the phone.
What Can You Expect from Your Asthma Treatment?
With
proper treatment for your asthma, you should be able to:
- Stay
active without having asthma symptoms (this includes
exercising and playing sports)
- Reduce
or even prevent asthma symptoms
- Keep
up your day-to-day activities
- No
missed school because of asthma
- No
or little need to go to the emergency department or hospital
- Sleep
through the night without having asthma symptoms
- Have
no or very few side effects from asthma medicines
If
you are still having asthma symptoms, even after you take your
asthma medicines, talk to your doctor or asthma counselor. They
can work with you to help you breathe well all the time.
How
Is Asthma Controlled?
There are
two good ways to treat and control asthma:
1. Keep
asthma symptoms from starting
You will need to find out what
triggers your asthma symptoms. Once you know your triggers, you can
stay away from them to help keep an asthma attack from starting.
Be open and honest with your doctor about your life. If he
doesn’t know that you like to play soccer with your friends
after school, he can’t help you prevent asthma attacks triggered
by running.
- Your doctor may want you to take:
- Medicines that keep the airways from becoming swollen (called long-term
controllers). These medicines need to be taken regularly, even when you’re feeling good.
- Medicines that help you breathe better fast (called quick-relief medicines) which
may also be taken to keep an asthma attack from happening when you know you’re around one of your
triggers. You should keep this kind of medicine with you at all times, even at
school.
You
may need to take one or both types of medicines to keep your
asthma under control. Your Asthma Action Plan will tell you when and how much to
take of any asthma medicine.
2. Stopping
symptoms or asthma attacks after they have started
- You need to learn to watch your body for the early warning
signs that can tell you that you may start having trouble with
your asthma. You need to take care of
the mild symptoms or warning signs of asthma to keep them from
turning into a severe attack.
- If you are having symptoms, your Asthma Action Plan will
tell you what to do. Your
plan will likely tell you to take quick-relief medicines that help
you breathe better fast. Be sure to keep your quick-relief
medicine handy. Get help right away if your
symptoms do not get better or get worse after you take your
medicine.
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