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Exercise-Induced Asthma: An Overview

The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 2001
Asthmatic attack in exercise-induced asthma is brought about by hyperventilation (not necessarily to exercise), cold air, and low humidity of the air breathed. The effects are an increase in airway resistance, damage to bronchial mucosa, and an increase in bronchovascular permeability.
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Exercise-induced asthma and doxantrazole

European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1977
In a double-blind cross-over trial in 13 patients with exercise-induced asthma, doxantrazole 200 mg taken orally 1 hour before a standardized exercise test involving stair climbing failed to block post-exercise bronchoconstriction. In an open assessment study with the same patients, increasing the doxantrazole dose to 400 mg did not affect post ...
H, Poppius, B, Stenius
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Issues in exercise-induced asthma

Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 1985
It is concluded that challenge by exercise and ISH induces asthma by the same mechanism, the protective effect of water vapor is evidence that the events that lead to bronchial smooth muscle contraction begin in the airway lumen, it is the loss of water rather than the loss of heat from the airways that is the primary stimulus to EIA and HIA, the ...
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Mechanisms of exercise-induced asthma

Lung, 1984
In a previous review in this journal McFadden eloquently presented the findings which led him and his colleagues to propose that respiratory heat loss and the subsequent cooling of the airways are the initial reaction sequence leading to airway obstruction in hyperventilation and exercise-induced asthma [62]. He further concluded that: “Exercise per se
E, Bar-Yishay, S, Godfrey
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Exercise-Induced Asthma in Athletes

Sports Medicine, 1988
Asthma is a common condition, affecting 5 to 10%ofthe adult population. Exercise(Floyer 1698), cold air (Miller et al. 1965) and fog (Lilker & Jauregui 1981) may precipitate bronchospasm in susceptible subjects. Exercise challenge on a treadmill is used in many respiratory function laboratories as a test for asthma in patients who have normal resting ...
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Exercise-Induced Asthma in Children

Pediatric Drugs, 2002
Exercise-induced asthma (EIA) is a relatively common problem in children, but may not be recognized because children either do not report their symptoms, or avoid activities that cause it. Clarifying the diagnosis of EIA, in particular separating EIA from other causes of exertional dyspnea, is essential.
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The prevention of exercise induced asthma

British Journal of Diseases of the Chest, 1972
Abstract Nine patients with exercise asthma were given different drugs before exercise under standardized conditions. Salbutamol and isoprenaline aerosols, disodium cromoglycate and disodium cromoglycate with isoprenaline succeeded in blocking the exercise asthma in most patients.
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Exercise-Induced Cardiac Troponin Elevations: From Underlying Mechanisms to Clinical Relevance

Circulation, 2021
Vincent L Aengevaeren   +2 more
exaly  

Exercise-induced asthma

The American Journal of Sports Medicine, 1981
William G. Clancy, William W. Busse
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