- Thursday, July 16, 2009, 12:23
- Asthma
- 1,551 views
Joyce: I'm on a corticosteroid oral inhalant such as Azmacort, and the instructions which come with it caution the patient to rinse the mouth after the use in order to prevent overgrowth of organisms. For example, thrush or whatever. Now I wondered if I were to use a nasal steroid inhalant also such as Flonase, whether ...
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- Thursday, July 16, 2009, 12:20
- Asthma
- 847 views
Andrew: Barrett, I had a question for you since we have you, and there may be young people listening, and certainly parents. People, both kids - and I have three little kids - and parents want to think that their child can compete and, I guess, what would you say to them to really say ...
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- Thursday, July 16, 2009, 10:23
- Asthma
- 2,446 views
Andrew: We have an e-mail question from a parent, Danny, who writes, "I have a 5-year-old who currently is using albuterol nebulizer three times a day, Flovent and also Flonase. The allergist is going to stop the albuterol nebulizer and give her Serevent along with Flonase and Flovent. Is this safe for use in a 5-year-old child?" Dr. Shapiro: I think it's ...
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- Thursday, July 16, 2009, 7:30
- Asthma
- 8,151 views
Asthma is a condition that is chronic in most cases; it involves the airways that you breathe through. As a result of the narrowing that occurs, you feel short of breath or you develop a cough or even wheeze. This may occur during exercise, it may occur following colds, and last longer than your neighbor's cold, or it may even awaken you during sleep.
Asthma isn't ...
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- Wednesday, July 15, 2009, 13:25
- Asthma
- 1,316 views
Andrew:
We had another e-mail question from Rob here in Milton, Washington. "Hi, Dr. Shapiro" he writes, "How often can a 2-year-old use Pediapred? And when do side effects come into play?" Dr. Shapiro: Pediapred is another oral steroid like the Prelone we were talking about, and like Prednisone. In a two-year-old it's not unusual if there's asthma, for every virus to cause ...
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- Wednesday, July 15, 2009, 10:12
- Asthma
- 1,016 views
Pam:
I'm in my mid-40s and I have been asthma-free for as long as I can remember. I allegedly had it as a child, but I have no memories of it. About a year ago I went to see the doctor with difficulty breathing. I was very sick. I thought I had some kind of respiratory flu, and I went in and I announced to ...
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- Wednesday, July 15, 2009, 7:30
- Asthma
- 697 views
TURNER: And, going to Kennewick, we have Kyna joining us. Welcome to the program. KYNA: Thanks. Well, I have a daughter that's five and she's had asthma maybe since she's been about three. And one of the things that she's severely allergic to is peanut ...
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- Tuesday, July 14, 2009, 16:22
- Asthma
- 699 views
Andrew:
Dr Shapiro, please explain for us, what a peak-flow meter is and its value.
Dr. Shapiro:
There are a number of different models, but they are a plastic tube with a little scale and stylus, and you blow into it hard and deflect the stylus and get numbers. You have certain numbers that are right for you--personal best is what we usually talk about--what's the best that ...
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- Tuesday, July 14, 2009, 10:12
- Asthma
- 1,106 views
Andrew:
We have a two-part e-mail question that comes from Mark in Illinois. First, how do people get asthma? And is there a genetic connection?
Dr. Shapiro:
The two questions are really connected. We believe that people get asthma because they have a genetic predisposition to having overly reactive muscles in the bronchial tubes and overly sensitive bronchial tubes. And then if people who have that genetic predisposition ...
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- Tuesday, July 14, 2009, 10:00
- Asthma
- 2,846 views
How does a patient know what is mild, moderate or severe asthma?
Dr. Shapiro: There are lots of different scales, so there's not really a gold standard. Some of the use of those terms comes from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute guidelines that were last updated in 1997. Generally, mild asthma is considered a disease where people might need a bronchodilator--we ...
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