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Asthma in Toddlers and Children

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, " dunno76 " <dunno76

wrote:

>

>

> Something which I found quite useful. Just recently, I have 2

nephews

> who have been down with colds and flu and coughing and sometimes I

am

> concerned if whether they might have asthma. It is a blessing that

> neither of them has asthma. They have some inflammation. It is known

> that some can grow out of asthma as they grow older. However, if not

> taken care of properly, it might stay on with them even when they

grow>

 

Respiratory ailments are on the rise. I read an article in National

Geographic a couple months back about a guy that was trying to figure

out where he got all the toxins in his body. Anyway, in the article

it stated that all the new carpets, mattresses, furniture, etc. that

had been coming out over the past decade have been saturated with

flame retardent. They " think " there is a direct link. Also, the

household cleaners most people use in their home, we have been

trained to believe that if it doesn't smell clean, it isn't!

Unfortunately, that clean smell is deadly to us and is also part of

the cause of these ailments in small children and everyone else.

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Asthma is connected to low glutathione in the research. Big Pharma has

a developed a glutathione inhaler called Mucomyst for this purpose.

I've had success with asthma in children and adults, and also COPD in

the elderly, using undenatured whey, selenium, a b-complex and

vitamins A, C, E; today I'd recommend vitamin D as well.

 

Better to treat the kids with antioxidants than let them " grow out of

it " because the latter allows a lot of permanent lung damage the

former does not ;)

 

We don't have to be as hapless as medical practice is in this regard.

 

 

Duncan

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I wonder how many babies are doing soy milk stuff rather than breat milk?

 

Ed

 

-

Duncan Crow

Friday, March 16, 2007 3:31 PM

Re: Asthma in Toddlers and Children

 

 

Asthma is connected to low glutathione in the research. Big Pharma has a developed a glutathione inhaler called Mucomyst for this purpose. I've had success with asthma in children and adults, and also COPD in the elderly, using undenatured whey, selenium, a b-complex and vitamins A, C, E; today I'd recommend vitamin D as well.Better to treat the kids with antioxidants than let them "grow out of it" because the latter allows a lot of permanent lung damage the former does not ;)We don't have to be as hapless as medical practice is in this regard.Duncan

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The worse thing than childhood asthma is asthma in toddlers. Most

children who have asthma developed the disease while they were still

toddlers. With a reported 5 million American children suffering from

asthma, 173 thousand of them hospitalized for severe symptoms and 864

thousand receiving emergency treatment annually, it is important that

your toddler be evaluated for asthma as early as possible.

 

Since it is more difficult to diagnose asthma among infants and

toddlers, it would be best to look for signs or symptoms that

characterize the disease. Many cases of asthma deaths were due to the

parents' failure to recognize the severity of the toddler's condition.

Common colds and respiratory diseases such as bronchitis can exhibit

asthma-like symptoms. But this does not mean you should ignore your

child especially when he has difficulty in breathing or a wheezing

cough.

 

When your toddler is diagnosed with asthma, it does not mean he will be

forever afflicted with the disease. On the contrary, there are lots of

documented cases where the toddler's asthma no longer persisted into

adulthood. It can also be deduced from this observation that toddlers

are more susceptible to asthma triggers but develops immunity as they

grow older.

 

Read:

http://informationa lnetwork. blogspot. com/2007/ 03/asthma- in-toddlers- and-\

children.html

<http://informationa lnetwork. blogspot. com/2007/ 03/asthma- in-toddlers- and\

-children.html>

 

 

 

 

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Yes, certainly we can outgrow asthma. I had asthma when I was still a children.

Still remember my parents were very worried about me always. And I was not

allowed to drink cold water or to eat ice-cream as it would trigger an attack.

However, when I reached around the age of around 10 year old. I was all well

already. And it is a blessing that it never came back for me.

 

BK

 

Renee <gaiacita wrote:

I was born with asthma. We lived pretty close to a river and the

doctors

told my folks to try moving away from the river, and if that didn't work

then they'd have to move to a very dry climate. They moved into town, 10

miles from the river, and little by little I got better. By the time I

reached high school I didn't have asthma anymore. Every so often as an adult

I would have a very minor attack, maybe once every 2 or 3 years, but for all

intents and purposes, it was gone. It's been over 20 years and I haven't had

any attacks at all. So it's possible to outgrow it.

 

Samala,

Renee

 

----

 

When your toddler is diagnosed with asthma, it does not mean he will be

Forever afflicted with the disease. On the contrary, there are lots of

Documented cases where the toddler's asthma no longer persisted into

Adulthood. It can also be deduced from this observation that toddlers

Are more susceptible to asthma triggers but develops immunity as they

Grow older.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Real people. Real questions. Real answers. Share what you know.

 

 

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Thats is a pleasant information from ur messages and experiences.

And in elders stem cell research is going to solve many uncurable

diseases,but do asthama's basic cause has something to do with stem

cells or not.I got this idea by the information that toddlers with

asthama grow up as healthy individuals.

 

Alok

 

http://loveurpatients.blogspot.com

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We taught martial arts for a long time, and the breath training that is

involved can certainly improve asthma. The symptoms of asthma may come

from physical development, breathing habits, or emotional stress, but

getting control of the breathing can also alleviate the fear that may

make the asthma worse. Getting control of breathing when you're not

actually in a situation where breathing is difficult is very

empowering, and that training can flow into your physical and emotional

reaction to symptoms of asthma. There are many books and techniques

allowing control of breath and promoting the importance of it. Breath

training is one of those cure-all wonders that they used to try to sell

in bottles. It may completely get rid of the asthma, but even if it

doesn't, it will certainly help more than reliance on drugs.

 

All one,

 

Renae

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