Allergy and Asthma Relief
Get strategies for keeping your symptoms under control.
Mar 18, 2013
Jun 02, 2022
AllergiesPew Foundation Scholar in Nutrition and Metabolism
Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine
University of Maryland
Baltimore, MD
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There are lifestyle strategies you can use beyond medication, cleaning and dust control that might help get your asthma and allergy symptoms under control. Let's talk about strategies focused on diet and stress management.
My first recommendation? Lose weight. A recent study found women with a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or more had three times the risk of asthma compared to women with BMIs less than 20. The connection may be due to more fat cells, which release inflammatory chemicals that can contribute to asthma (and allergies). Plus, if you're overweight, your asthma symptoms are likely to be worse.
Next, pay attention to your diet. We're learning an amazing amount about the beneficial effects of certain foods on allergies and asthma. Here are my top three dietary strategies:
Now focus on controlling the stress in your life and your reaction to it. Although asthma was once thought to be a psychosomatic illness (i.e., imagined, or "all in your head,"), today we know that's not true. However, we also know that stress can trigger an asthma attack just as much as a smoke-filled room.
One of the best things you can do when you feel overwhelmed or under stress is close your eyes (assuming you're not driving at the time) and visualize a calming, relaxing place. It could be a tropical resort, a peaceful room lit only by a single candle or a field covered in wildflowers.
Now breathe slowly in through your nose and out through your mouth, making a humming sound as you breathe out. This is called percussive breathing, and it not only serves to center you and stem the release of stress hormones, but helps release the tight feeling around your chest that can lead to an asthma attack.
By combining environmental changes with preventive medication, a healthy diet, weight loss and stress management tools, I'm sure you'll find that you're better able to control both allergy and asthma symptoms.
Heartburn and Asthma
If you have asthma and frequent heartburn, the two may be related. Studies show that as many as 70 percent of people with asthma also have gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD, in which stomach acid washes up through the esophagus.
We're not quite sure why the two co-exist, but suspect the asthma somehow contributes to a relaxation of the esophageal sphincter, the muscle that is supposed to keep stomach contents in the stomach.
It may also be that GERD contributes to asthma in some way, since at least one study finds that anti-reflux surgery can significantly improve asthma symptoms in patients with both. You don't have to go the surgical route, however. Try to avoid acidic or fatty foods that exacerbate GERD, like tomatoes, chocolate, fast food and fried food. Also avoid peppermint or spearmint candies or herbs. And, as mentioned earlier, losing weight can help with both conditions.