Asthma: Symptoms, Causes, Treatments & Natural Approaches

Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the lower airways. The bronchi and bronchioles, the tubes that carry air into the lungs, become inflamed, swollen, and reactive — narrowing in response to triggers and producing the recognizable symptoms of wheezing, coughing, chest tightness, and shortness of breath. Asthma affects an estimated 262 million people worldwide and is one of the most common chronic conditions in children, though it can begin at any age.

This page covers what asthma is, what causes attacks, how it is diagnosed, and the three main treatment paths: alternative and complementary approaches from healing traditions worldwide, over-the-counter options, and prescription medications.

About Asthma

Asthma (technically bronchial asthma) is a chronic inflammatory condition of the lower respiratory tract characterized by reversible airway obstruction, bronchial hyperresponsiveness, and airway remodeling. The bronchi and bronchioles — the conducting airways that branch from the trachea into the lungs — become inflamed at the mucosal surface and narrowed by smooth-muscle contraction of the airway walls.

The hallmark physiology involves three mechanisms acting together during an attack:

  • Bronchoconstriction — the smooth muscle wrapping the bronchi tightens, mechanically narrowing the airway.
  • Inflammation — the airway lining swells with inflammatory cells (eosinophils, mast cells, T-helper-2 lymphocytes) releasing histamine, leukotrienes, and cytokines.
  • Mucus hypersecretion — goblet cells produce thick mucus that further obstructs the narrowed airways.

Asthma is classified by severity (intermittent, mild persistent, moderate persistent, severe persistent), by trigger pattern (allergic / atopic vs. non-allergic), and by clinical phenotype (exercise-induced, occupational, aspirin-exacerbated, eosinophilic, etc.). Most people with asthma have an underlying genetic predisposition combined with environmental triggers.

Symptoms

The classic symptoms of asthma reflect the underlying airway narrowing and inflammation:

  • Wheezing — a high-pitched whistling sound on exhalation, sometimes audible at rest, often more pronounced during or after exercise
  • Shortness of breath (dyspnea) — feeling unable to get enough air, especially with activity or at night
  • Cough — often dry and worse at night or with cold air; in some people (cough-variant asthma) cough is the only symptom
  • Chest tightness — a sensation of pressure or constriction in the chest
  • Low oxygen saturation during attacks, sometimes leading to lightheadedness or fainting in severe episodes

Symptoms typically fluctuate over time, often worsening at night, in the early morning, with exposure to triggers (allergens, cold air, exercise, respiratory infections, smoke, fumes), or during respiratory illnesses. Between attacks, many people with well-controlled asthma have no symptoms at all.

Red flags requiring emergency care: severe shortness of breath with inability to speak in full sentences, blue or grey lips/fingertips (cyanosis), peak flow under 50%% of personal best, no improvement with rescue inhaler.

Tests & Diagnostics

Asthma is diagnosed clinically and confirmed with objective measurements of variable airway obstruction.

History and physical examination

The clinician evaluates symptom pattern, triggers, family history of asthma or atopy (eczema, allergic rhinitis), occupational and environmental exposures, and reviews response to past treatment trials. Physical exam may reveal wheezing on auscultation, prolonged expiratory phase, or signs of allergic disease.

Pulmonary function testing

  • Spirometry — the primary diagnostic test, measuring FEV1 (forced expiratory volume in 1 second) and FVC (forced vital capacity); reversibility of obstruction after bronchodilator confirms asthma
  • Peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) — bedside measurement of maximum exhalation speed; useful for home monitoring and tracking treatment response
  • Bronchoprovocation testing (methacholine or exercise challenge) — used when spirometry is normal but asthma is still suspected

Adjunctive testing

  • Chest X-ray — typically normal in uncomplicated asthma but ordered to exclude pneumonia, foreign body, or structural causes
  • Allergy testing — skin prick or specific IgE blood testing identifies allergic triggers
  • FeNO (fractional exhaled nitric oxide) — measures eosinophilic airway inflammation, useful in steroid-responsive phenotype
  • CBC with differential — eosinophilia supports allergic/eosinophilic asthma

Common tests: X-ray.

AlternativeMed Portion

Alternative medicine approaches

Each approach below comes from a distinct worldwide healing tradition. Compare frameworks side by side.

Traditional Chinese Medicine

Path 3 — Prescription Options

Prescription medications

Conventional treatment summary

Conventional asthma treatment follows a stepwise approach defined by global guidelines (GINA, NIH), separating rescue therapy for acute symptoms from controller therapy for long-term management.

Rescue (quick-relief) therapy

For acute symptoms, the standard first-line treatment is a short-acting beta-2 agonist (SABA) bronchodilator — most commonly albuterol (salbutamol) via metered-dose inhaler or nebulizer. These work within minutes by relaxing airway smooth muscle.

Controller (long-term) therapy

For persistent asthma, daily controller medications reduce airway inflammation:

  • Inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) — fluticasone, budesonide, beclomethasone, mometasone — the cornerstone of long-term control
  • Long-acting beta-agonists (LABA) — combined with ICS, never used alone — salmeterol, formoterol
  • Leukotriene receptor antagonists — montelukast, zafirlukast — oral, useful for allergic + exercise-induced patterns
  • Inhaled cromolyn or nedocromil — mast-cell stabilizers, especially in pediatric and exercise-induced asthma
  • Long-acting muscarinic antagonists (LAMA) — tiotropium — for moderate-severe cases
  • Biologics — omalizumab (anti-IgE), mepolizumab/reslizumab/benralizumab (anti-IL-5), dupilumab (anti-IL-4Ralpha) — for severe asthma with specific phenotypes

Severe flare management

Acute severe asthma requires oral or intravenous corticosteroids (prednisone, methylprednisolone), supplemental oxygen, nebulized bronchodilators, and in life-threatening cases, magnesium sulfate IV, ventilator support, or ICU admission.

Trigger identification and avoidance, allergen immunotherapy (for allergic asthma), and patient education on inhaler technique are essential components of any treatment plan.

Medical specialties

Internal Medicine · Pediatrics · Pulmonology · Family Practice · Allergy and Immunology · Pediatric Pulmonology

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between asthma and COPD?

Both involve airway obstruction, but asthma is characterized by reversible obstruction with inflammation, often allergic, that can fully resolve between attacks. COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) is largely irreversible, more strongly tied to smoking, and tends to progress over time. The two can coexist (asthma-COPD overlap) and require different treatment emphasis.

Can asthma be cured naturally?

Asthma cannot be cured by any approach — conventional or alternative. It can be very effectively managed, however. Many people experience long symptom-free periods with a combination of trigger avoidance, controller medication, and supportive practices like targeted breathing exercises, anti-inflammatory diet, and stress management. Some children outgrow asthma. Alternative approaches should complement, not replace, controller therapy in moderate-to-severe cases.

Which alternative medicine approaches have the most evidence for asthma?

Among complementary approaches with the strongest evidence: Buteyko breathing technique (multiple randomized trials showing reduced rescue inhaler use), yoga pranayama (improved lung function and quality of life), Boswellia extract (modest improvement in mild-moderate asthma via 5-LOX inhibition), the Kampo formula Saiboku-to (steroid-sparing effect demonstrated in Japanese studies), and dietary patterns rich in antioxidants and omega-3 fatty acids.

Is Ma Huang (ephedra) safe for asthma?

Ma Huang contains ephedrine and is a powerful bronchodilator that was the historical basis for modern asthma medications. However, the FDA banned ephedra-containing dietary supplements in 2004 due to cardiovascular events. Whole-herb Ma Huang is still used in licensed Traditional Chinese Medicine practice under qualified practitioners. It should never be used for self-treatment, combined with stimulants, or used by anyone with heart disease, hypertension, hyperthyroidism, or during pregnancy.

When should I see a doctor for asthma?

See a clinician promptly if you have new wheezing, recurrent cough lasting more than three weeks, exertional shortness of breath, or chest tightness. If you have existing asthma, seek urgent care for: needing the rescue inhaler more than twice a week between flares, waking at night with symptoms, peak flow consistently below 80%% of personal best, or any asthma attack that does not respond to rescue medication. Severe shortness of breath with difficulty speaking, blue lips, or confusion is a medical emergency — call emergency services immediately.

Can lifestyle changes prevent asthma attacks?

Lifestyle is a major lever in asthma control. Evidence supports: identifying and avoiding specific triggers (allergens, smoke, fumes, cold air, NSAIDs in sensitive individuals), maintaining healthy weight (obesity worsens asthma), aerobic exercise (within tolerance, with pre-medication if needed), influenza and pneumococcal vaccination, reducing indoor air pollutants and dust mite exposure, and managing comorbidities like allergic rhinitis and gastroesophageal reflux. Smoking cessation is essential for both asthmatics and household contacts.

This page is educational content, not medical advice. Always consult a qualified clinician for diagnosis and treatment of Asthma.