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What Causes Asthma?
Inflammation (swelling) of the airways
is the underlying cause of asthma, and there are two main reasons
that people develop asthma, says Fernando Martinez, M.D.,
director of the Arizona Respiratory Center at the University of Arizona
College of Medicine in Tucson.
"Some people develop asthma because they react to viral
infections like the common cold. Another group is genetically
predisposed to it, and for them, asthma is associated with the
way the lungs grow and the way the immune system develops." It is in
this second group that asthma tends to be persistent, and there is often
a family history of asthma and allergies. "Over the next decade,"
Martinez says, "determining which genes are involved will help
scientists prevent and treat asthma. |
Inheritance of Asthma
Can you inherit asthma? Asthma
tends to run in families that are prone to allergies. So, belonging to a
family where some members have asthma and others have other allergies -
such as eczema, hayfever or allergic rhinitis - makes a person more
allergy-prone. However, because there are so many factors involved, it
can be difficult to predict exactly who in a family will develop asthma.
(BBC Health Article)
Asthma Attack Cause cont..
William Busse, M.D., professor of
medicine in allergy and immunology at the University of Wisconsin
Medical School, says the causes of the increasing asthma rates
are not fully understood. He says that the prevalence of asthma
is higher in developed countries, such as the United States, Europe, and
New Zealand, and is lower in less developed areas, such as China and
Africa. This suggests a possible role of environmental or lifestyle
factors that may affect the type and magnitude of exposure to
environmental allergens and immune response to that exposure.
Researchers are exploring possible factors
such as diet, frequent use of antibiotics, and fewer and less severe
infections in early life. Busse says studies have shown that children
who are enrolled in day care before 6 months of age have more frequent
infections in early life, but significantly less asthma after age 6.
Asthma also occurs more in urban environments than in farming
ones. The Hygiene Hypothesis, first proposed in 1989, remains under
debate and requires further study, according to Busse. This hypothesis
states that environments that are too clean may actually make immune
function more likely to develop allergic responses. In a study published
in the Sept. 19, 2002, issue of The New England Journal of Medicine,
researchers studied 812 children ages 6 to 13 living in rural areas of
Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, and found that children in farming
households experienced a decreased risk of hay fever and asthma.
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