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What causes asthma?

Click here for your free Asthma Factsheet.




Asthma is a complex condition. It is difficult to say for sure what causes it but, so far, we suspect that genes play a part in predisposing someone to developing the condition. We also know that there isn’t a single asthma gene. Instead, the combined effects of several genes probably work together to produce a susceptibility to asthma; in the same way, other genes lower the chances of developing it.

As countries and communities have modernised, it could also be that changes in lifestyle (diet, housing and hygiene) have led to a higher prevalence of allergy. It may well be that communities eating a lot of natural and fresh foods, which contain lots of chemicals called antioxidants, are relatively well protected against developing allergies.

There is still so much to find out about the allergic process and what it is about our environment that has caused the phenomenal increase in allergic disease throughout the modern world. In the meantime, allergy is, unfortunately, part of everyday life for many of us, and a number of so-called ‘triggers’ can set it off, such as viral infections (colds or flu), allergies (to pollen, animals, housedust mites), irritants (cold air, tobacco smoke, chemical fumes) and exercise.

Although it is unlikely that you will be able to avoid all your asthma triggers all of the time, steering clear of them will help to keep your symptoms at bay. Try to keep a record of the times and situations when your asthma is worse. This will help you identify what your asthma triggers are.

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WDDTY Blog Speak

What triggers asthma? - It can be difficult to identify exactly what triggers your asthma. Sometimes the link is obvious — for example, when your symptoms start within minute...

Food allergy and asthma - Although allergies have been identified as an asthma trigger, they won’t cause asthma on their own. In fact, not all allergic people have asthma, and...

Asthma: a breath of fresh air - If ever a disease were misunderstood by modern medicine, it is asthma. Although doctors finally have begun to accept that asthma may be caused by an a...

How medicine treats asthma - The conventional treatment of asthma relies on a two-pronged approach. The first is to eliminate the ‘triggers’, which provoke asthma attacks in the f...

Asthma is on the decline: - But why? - The good news is that asthma is on the decrease after rising for 40 years. The bad news is that nobody has a clue about the reason for the sudden dec...

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Asthma: the enemy within - There has been a huge increase in asthma in Western countries since the early 1960s. Asthma currently kills nearly 2000 people a year in England and W...