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Asthma is an allergic condition resulting
from the reaction of the system to one or more allergens.
It is the most troublesome of the respiratory diseases.
The asthma patient gets frequent attacks of
breathlessness, in between which he is completely normal. Symptoms
Asthma is an
ancient Greek word meaning " panting or short-drawn
breath". Patients suffering from asthma appear to be
gasping for breath. Actually, they have more difficulty
in breathing out than breathing in and it is caused by a
spasm of the smaller air passage in the lung. The effect
is to blow the lungs up because the patient cannot drive
the air properly out of the lungs before he has to take
another breath. All asthmatics have more difficulty at
night, especially during sleep.
The onset of asthma may be abrupt or gradual. Sudden
onsets are often preceded by a spell of coughing. When
the onset is gradual, the attack is usually brought on by
respiratory infection. A severe attack causes an increase
in heart-beat and respiratory rates and the patient feels
restless and fatigued. There may be coughing, tightness
in the chest, profuse, sweating and vomiting. There may
also be abdominal pain, especially if coughing is severe.
The wheezing sound identified with asthma is produced by
the air being pushed through the narrowed bronchi.
Causes
Asthma is
caused by a variety of factors. For many it is due to an
allergy which may be caused by weather conditions, food,
drugs, perfumes and other irritants which vary with
different individuals. Allergies to dust are the most
common. Some persons are sensitive to the various forms
of dust like cotton dust, wheat dust and paper dust,
certain types of pollens, animal hair, fungi and insects.
Foods which generally cause allergic reactions are wheat,
eggs, milk, chocolates, beans,potato and beef.
For others, asthma may result from psychic factors.
According to some studies about 25 per cent of the young
asthmatics have in common a "deeper-seated emotional
insecurity and an intense need for parental love and
specific protection." Heredity also plays an
important role, and it has been estimated that when both
parents have asthma or hay fever, in more than 75 per
cent cases, the offspring also have allergic reactions.
Asthma has also been attributed to malnutrition.
According to late Dr. Royal Lee, a nutrition expert,
malnutrition in general, with adrenal insufficiency,
hypoglycemia and intolerance for carbohydrates are the
factors leading to asthma in adults. Dr. Carl J. Reich of
Canada also considers asthma as a maladaptive state of
the body due to deficiency of certain nutritional
elements.
Dietary
Treatment
The modern
medical system has not been able to find a cure for
asthma. Drugs and vaccines have only a limited value in
alleviating symptoms. Most of these are habit forming and
the dose has to be increased from time to time to give
the same amount of relief. They also tend to make asthma
chronic. Allergy - which is the immediate cause of the
asthma - itself is an indication of lowered resistance
and internal disharmony caused by dietetic errors and a
faulty style of living. The real cure, therefore, lies in
the stimulation of the functioning of slack excretory
organs and appropriate diet patterns to eliminate toxic
and waste matter and reconstruct the body.
To begin with, the patient should fast for three to five
days on lemon juice with honey. During this period the
bowels should be cleansed daily with a warm water enema.
After the fast, the patient may resort to an all-fruit
diet for a further five to seven days to nourish the
system and eliminate the toxins. Thereafter, other foods
may be gradually added to the diet. Further short fasts
and periods on all-fruit diet may be required in certain
cases at intervals of two or three months depending upon
the progress being made.
A vegetarian diet is best for asthma. Ideally, his diet
should contain a limited quantity of carbohydrates, fats
and proteins which are acid-forming foods, and a liberal
quantity of alkaline foods consisting of fresh fruits,
green vegetables and sprouted seeds and grains. The
breakfast may consist of fresh fruits with prunes or
other dried fruit. Steamed vegetables with whole wheat
bread or chappatis may be taken for lunch and dinner may
consist of a large salad of raw vegetables such as
cucumber, lettuce, tomato, carrot and beets with cottage
cheese, prunes or other dried fruit. The last meal should
preferably be taken before sunset or at least two hours
before going to bed.
The patient should avoid foods which tend to produce
phlegm, such as rice, sugar, lentils and curds as also
fried and other difficult -to-digest foods. He should
also avoid strong tea, coffee, alcoholic beverages,
condiments, pickles, sauces and all refined and processed
foods. Initially, milk and milk products should be
totally avoided. After noticeable recovery, a small
quantity of milk may be added in the diet.
Asthmatics should always eat less than their capacity.
They should eat slowly, chewing their food properly. They
should drink eight to ten glasses of water every day, but
should avoid taking water with meals.
Asthma, particularly when the attack is seve re, tends to
destroy the appetite. In such cases, do not force the
patient to eat . He should be kept fasting till the
attack is over. He should, however, take a cup of warm
water every two hours. An enema taken at that time would
be beneficial.
Honey is highly beneficial in the treatment of asthma. It
is said that if a jug of honey is held under the nose of
an asthma patient and he inhales the air that comes into
contact with the honey, he starts breathing easier and
deeper. The effects lasts for about an hour or so. This
is because honey contains a mixture of higher
alcohols and ethereal oils and the vapours given
off by them are soothing and beneficial to the asthma
patients. Honey usually brings relief whether the air
flowing over it is inhaled or whether it is eaten or
taken either in milk or water. Some authorities recommend
one year old honey for respiratory disease.
A recently completed study by Dr. Robert D. Reynolds
Ph.D., a researcher with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, has shown that a vitamin B6 deficiency
contributed to an asthmatic condition and the intake of
even 50 milligrams of this vitamin twice a day can
relieve the wheezing and other symptoms. Says Dr.
Reynolds, " The daily B6 supplements stop the
wheezing in about a week and the asthmatic attacks
themselves occur less frequently and are of shorter
duration. "
The patient should also follow the other laws of nature.
Air, sun and water are great healing agents. Regular
fasting once a week, an occasional enema, breathing
exercises, fresh air, dry climate, light exercises and a
correct posture go a long way in treating the disease.
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