Treating Asthma with Chinese Medicine

Over thirty years ago I moved to Minnesota from Hawaii. My husband and I had spent a couple of years in the islands swimming in the ocean, biking endlessly, running in the humidity, and spending Saturday afternoons sitting on the beach near our house.

Needless to say, moving to Minnesota was a shock on so many levels, but I was determined at the very least to continue running throughout the winter. In those early years, my lowest temperature limit was fifteen below. I would bundle up, cover my face and go run a couple of miles. Somehow it made me feel a little self-righteous and invincible to be running outdoors when it was so cold.

Exercise induced asthmaA couple of years into my cold weather running craziness, I began to struggle with shortness of breath. Whenever I was physically active, regardless of the temperature outside, I felt like I had an elephant sitting on my chest. To make a long story short I had developed exercise-induced asthma. It was my body’s way of telling me to lighten up on my lungs and ditch the icy workouts.

About 25 million people in the US have asthma, or about eight percent of the population. Symptoms can range from mild to severe, with about half of sufferers experiencing an asthma attack in the past year. Asthma may present as shortness of breath, coughing, or wheezing. However, during an attack, the muscles surrounding the airways tighten (bronchospasm) and breathing becomes difficult. For some, an asthma attack can be severe enough to be life threatening. Treatments for asthma from a Western biomedical perspective include rescue inhalers for acute attacks, and long term medications, such as inhaled steroids, beta agonists, and leukotriene modifiers.

In Chinese medicine, the cause of asthma is something called “enduring phlegm”, which means that there is always an element of phlegm obstructing the lungs in people who have asthma. However, digging a little deeper, the underlying cause of any kind of phlegm in your body comes from issues with poor water metabolism.

In simple terms, water is metabolized at three levels in your body. In your Lungs, water is processed through respiration. If you breathe onto a mirror, you will see that the moisture from your lungs will make the mirror mist up. At the mid-level, your Chinese Spleen is responsible for metabolizing water through the digestive process. And at the lower level your Kidneys are responsible for the balance of fluids in your body, but also for elimination of water that’s not needed.

An imbalance in any of these three organ systems can lead to a buildup of water, which over time stagnates and thickens and becomes phlegm. The most common culprit is poor diet or digestion, in which eating too many rich foods, sweets, or dairy foods can bog down your digestion, to the point of generating phlegm.

Because problems with water metabolism can come from your Lungs, Spleen, or Kidneys, there are a number of patterns in Chinese medicine describing the source of your asthma. For example, you can have a Lung depletion, phlegm and heat in your Lungs, internal cold, a Spleen depletion (poor digestion), or a Kidney depletion. In addition, the pattern describing your asthma may change dramatically during an acute attack compared to when your asthma symptoms are relatively calm.

There are a number of triggers for your asthma symptoms, again depending on the underlying cause of your asthma. One of the most common triggers is inhaling cold air or being in the cold, and less frequently breathing warm, humid air. In addition, changes in the weather, pollen, smoke, and pollution may also act as triggers for asthma attacks. Internal factors that can trigger symptoms include having a cold or the flu and even stress.

Treatment for asthma in Chinese medicine involves determining the source of the problem. Where is there a water metabolism problem? What are your triggers for an asthma attack? What is your overall body constitution like? Your practitioner would incorporate acupuncture and most likely a Chinese herbal formula to treat your asthma. However, if you are having an acute attack with difficulty breathing, it’s imperative that you are under the care of a Western doctor, too. Chinese medicine can be a powerful tool in treating chronic asthma, preventing attacks and bringing your water metabolism back into balance, but Chinese medicine and Western medicine are not mutually exclusive when it comes to treating asthma.

Looking back, I realize that my running in the very cold weather was irritating to the point of disrupting the water metabolism in my Lungs. However, my asthma story has a happy ending. First, I quit running when it was so cold out. My lower limit today is about ten degrees above zero, and even then my face is covered. I also had to use a rescue inhaler for a year or two when it became difficult for me to breathe. I also incorporated some acupuncture, Chinese herbs, and breathing exercises into the healing process. Today, I don’t think about asthma and haven’t had that elephant sitting on my chest in years.

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Chinese Medicine for Asthma

 If you suffer from asthma, you’re no stranger to the shortness of breath, chest tightness, coughing, and wheezing that go with this condition. Over 16 million adults and 7 million children in America suffer from asthma, and it kills about 5,000 people a year.

Asthma occurs because the airways in your lungs tighten, become inflamed, or become filled with mucous.  Asthma symptoms may be frequent or occasional, and they may be mild, severe, or even life threatening.

In Chinese medicine, there is always some element of phlegm associated with a diagnosis of asthma.  In fact, the Chinese use the term “abiding phlegm” in talking about asthma, meaning that even when you’re not having symptoms; phlegm is always an underlying cause of your condition.  In Chinese medicine, asthma may be caused by the environment, strong emotions, poor diet, stress, overwork, and being depleted by chronic illness.

There are a number of underlying patterns, or Chinese medical diagnoses, that are associated with asthma.  A couple can be by-products of a bad cold or flu, in that the asthma flares up when you’re is sick.  The patterns include:

Wind/Cold.  This is the kind of asthma you get when you have a cold and it sinks into your chest, making it hard for you to breathe.  Typical symptoms include a headache, aches and pains, a low grade fever, mild chills, a sensation of feeling cold, chest tightness, and coughing of thin, white phlegm.  While this pattern is usually associated with a cold or the flu, it can occur without your ever being sick.  In that case, allergies, cold air, wind, or even exercise may be triggers.

Phlegm Heat.  If you don’t get over your cold right away, your chest may remain congested and you may wheeze and cough up thick yellow phlegm. (Gross!) Inflammation or infection is a player in this pattern, so you will also feel hot and thirsty, you may run a fever, and feel dry and constipated.  Again, this pattern doesn’t necessarily have to be the by-product of a cold or the flu.  There are some people who have asthma that is hot and inflamed all the time whose asthma would also fall under this pattern.

Lung Deficiency.  This tends to be a less severe form of asthma.  Symptoms include shortness of breath, a weak voice, a forceless cough, wheezing, sweating (not necessarily associated with feeling hot), and thin white or clear phlegm. Lung deficiency sounds exactly like what it is—weak lungs.

Kidney Deficiency.  How could your Kidney have anything to do with asthma?  Well, your Chinese Kidney is associated with your body constitution, the strength of your health, how well you age, and the strength of your energetic reserves.  A weak Kidney system is associated with an overall depletion of energy; you’re run down.  This is the type of asthma that is frequently triggered by exercise, exertion, or cold.  Other symptoms include shortness of breath, difficulty inhaling, fatigue, feeling cold to your core, and cold extremities.

Treatment for asthma, according to Chinese medicine is two-fold.  During the acute stage (an asthma attack), the first order of business is to calm the attack and promote smooth respiration.  This would be done using acupuncture and herbs.  It needs to be said here that if your asthma is not under control, an attack is serious and could even be life-threatening.  This means that you need to be under the care of a doctor who can prescribe medications, usually as an inhaler, for emergency attacks.

The second level of treatment is to alleviate the underlying cause of your asthma when you’re not having symptoms.  For example, if Phlegm/Heat is causing your asthma, then treatment would focus on reducing or drying the phlegm and clearing your heat.  Again, a combination of acupuncture and herbs, combined with food therapy and lifestyle changes would be used. 

A few tips that may be helpful in controlling and alleviating your symptoms include:

-Avoid triggers that cause your symptoms.  These may include cold, exercise, allergens, and certain foods.

-Stay out of smoky rooms.

-If you also suffer from heartburn, know that a flare up can aggravate your asthma.  Deal with the heartburn to help your asthma.

-Keep your neck and chest warm, especially if cold is a trigger for you.  Wear a scarf; they’re fashionable even if it’s not winter.

-Take it easy on the dairy products.  They tend to produce phlegm.

-Try breathing exercises.  Take a Yoga, Tai Qi, or Qi Gong class.  Otherwise, breathe to a 4-7-8 count.  Inhale to the count of 4, hold to the count of 7, and exhale to the count of 8.  Do a set of 4 a couple of times a day.  Personal note:  Breathing exercises completely alleviated my exercise-induced asthma.

-It’s great to go the alternative medicine route, but don’t be stupid.  Use your inhaler if you’re having an attack.

-If you get caught without your inhaler, try some caffeine.  It acts like the asthma drug Theophylline.  Also, a cup of coffee or tea before your workout may also keep exercise-induced symptoms under control.

-Try some Vitamin B6.  50 mg. a day may help with the severity of your symptoms.

-Keep in touch with your lungs.  This is so touchy-feely, but it’s important to recognize patterns so you can head off an attack.  (Like pain, it’s much easier to manage if you try to control it early.)  See your doctor if your symptoms seem to be getting worse or harder to control.

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