Corticosteroid inhalers are safe
and effective in dealing with childhood asthma, reveals Cordelia B
Francis
Asha didn’t
have the kind of fun other children her age did. For that matter, she
didn’t have friends. Asha, like a growing number of children today,
suffers from childhood asthma. And that used to mean no sports, no getting all
fired-up over a sack race, never sharing the agony or victory of a good game.
She missed classes regularly and her parents were adamant that she avoid
any sort of sports. But that was until they finally decided to have her asthma
treated. Today, Asha’s running around and is a bag full of smiles and fun.
GET TREATMENT
The
national figures of asthma sufferers in India have crossed the three crore mark.
Of these, five-and-a-half lakh sufferers are children in Mumbai.
Dr
Sanjeev Mehta, consultant chest specialist at Lilavati Hospital, Mumbai, says,
“Diagnosis is important or else children live compromised lives. Diagnose
and treat asthma. If it’s allergic asthma, identify the allergen and avoid
that.”
Dr Mehta points out that while asthma patients will opt for
medication and relief, it’s usually the parents who find it difficult to
deal with the fact that their child is asthmatic.
The thought of watching
their child have to live with a long-term, often incurable disease is
disheartening. But that needn’t be the case. Matter-of-factly, he adds,
“Just as when a person is thirsty, she drinks water, similarly, when an
asthmatic person feels uncomfortable, she should use her inhaler.”
CORTICOSTEROIDS: PROVEN
SAFE
Research has proved that the regularly prescribed corticosteroid
inhalers are safe and effective in controlling asthma. Though parents worry that
the long-term use of steroids may stunt growth, ‘The New England
Journal’ has shown that corticosteroids have no side effects because they
go directly to the site of the problem, the lungs.
In another recent study
in the US, it has been found that children taking inhaled steroids were the same
height as other children. Other research has shown that while the short-term
growth of children on high doses of inhaled steroids may be affected, these
children do reach their predicted adult height.
Dr Sidney Braman,
president of the American College of Chest Physicians, says, “Your
child’s height is more likely to be affected by uncontrolled asthma, than
by the steroids.
” Taken over a period of time, the steroids protect
the airways from the allergens that trigger asthma. Two-thirds of children who
are treated with corticosteroid inhalers will have their asthma under control.
Only a few will need the support of medication to deal with their disease.
EARLY TREATMENT
Asthma often improves as children grow older, and many teenagers grow out
of childhood asthma. If you treat your child’s asthma early, she is less
likely to have problems as she grows up.
Dr Mehta warns, “It’s
when you ignore it that the problems begin.” Dr Braman elaborates:
“If asthma is not treated within six months, it could become
self-perpetuating, converting a victim’s lung from a normal to an
irritated lung.”
Simply put: If asthma is untreated, it will later
become untreatable because once the lungs are damaged, medicines become
ineffective. Remember, even when there are quiet episodes, no wheezing, sneezing
or coughing, the problem is still there. The inflammation still persists in the
bronchial tubes.
So, while not every cough and cold means your child is
asthmatic, bear in mind that frequent colds are one of the first symptoms of
asthma and that treatment is necessary.
WATCH OUT FOR:
*
An unexplained cough * Congestion after a cold * Wheezing * Struggling to
breathe and not sleeping at night
RESOURCE INFO
For
support and advice on dealing with asthma, contact the ABA (asthma, bronchitis,
allergy) Network at Mumbai; Tel: 6609847/6443407