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#1
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I have developed asthma a year ago after a sinus infection, and stayed
off racing for a year, just riding for myself. The asthma gradually improved with traditional meds, or just my body adapting (the latter more likely). I've been off most meds for a couple of months by now. Recenrtly I timed myself out of curiousity up a local climb which is used by locals for reference, an all-out effort for ~20 min. I did much better than my pre-asthma best, but within hours after the race the asthma came back to the same level it's been when I first developed it. It's not responding to any traditional meds, too. I am wondering if anyone who races with asthma has had a similar experience of race-induced long-lasting asthma relapses. I could not believe that just a single episode of an all-out riding could cause a long-lasting damage (an hour of cough is what I expected, but not days, and who knows how long it will last from now). My body is just fine otherwise. I am also thinking about racing while wearing a mask (my doc thinks its the California pollen) - has anyone tried that? |
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#2
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I have developed asthma a year ago after a sinus infection, and stayed
off racing for a year, just riding for myself. The asthma gradually improved with traditional meds, or just my body adapting (the latter more likely). I've been off most meds for a couple of months by now. Recenrtly I timed myself out of curiousity up a local climb which is used by locals for reference, an all-out effort for ~20 min. I did much better than my pre-asthma best, but within hours after the race the asthma came back to the same level it's been when I first developed it. It's not responding to any traditional meds, too. I am wondering if anyone who races with asthma has had a similar experience of race-induced long-lasting asthma relapses. I could not believe that just a single episode of an all-out riding could cause a long-lasting damage (an hour of cough is what I expected, but not days, and who knows how long it will last from now). My body is just fine otherwise. I am also thinking about racing while wearing a mask (my doc thinks its the California pollen) - has anyone tried that? I can't imagine that the "cure" (racing while wearing a mask) wouldn't be worse than the illness. I raced for a number of years with pretty nasty allergies and asthma, but never took any meds for them. Initially they tried all manner of things to target the allergies, but nothing seemed to work (didn't even make me drowsy) so they gave up. I sounded like a steam engine when climbing back then, and that's pretty much the way I sound now. Colder weather definitely makes it worse, no question... below about 60 degrees or so I get some wheezing action going from time to time. When you talk about meds, have you used an inhaler? That was all the rage when I raced; people who didn't have asthma would claim otherwise and get prescriptions for inhalers, which supposedly did wondrous things. I never did; didn't like the idea of drugs in general (and I grew up in the 70s???). --Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReactionBicycles.com wrote in message ups.com... I have developed asthma a year ago after a sinus infection, and stayed off racing for a year, just riding for myself. The asthma gradually improved with traditional meds, or just my body adapting (the latter more likely). I've been off most meds for a couple of months by now. Recenrtly I timed myself out of curiousity up a local climb which is used by locals for reference, an all-out effort for ~20 min. I did much better than my pre-asthma best, but within hours after the race the asthma came back to the same level it's been when I first developed it. It's not responding to any traditional meds, too. I am wondering if anyone who races with asthma has had a similar experience of race-induced long-lasting asthma relapses. I could not believe that just a single episode of an all-out riding could cause a long-lasting damage (an hour of cough is what I expected, but not days, and who knows how long it will last from now). My body is just fine otherwise. I am also thinking about racing while wearing a mask (my doc thinks its the California pollen) - has anyone tried that? |
#3
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![]() I can't imagine that the "cure" (racing while wearing a mask) wouldn't be worse than the illness. yeah, I will look like a cyborg, but... I raced for a number of years with pretty nasty allergies and asthma, but never took any meds for them. Initially they tried all manner of things to target the allergies, but nothing seemed to work (didn't even make me drowsy) so they gave up. I sounded like a steam engine when climbing back then, and that's pretty much the way I sound now. Colder weather definitely makes it worse, no question... below about 60 degrees or so I get some wheezing action going from time to time. Pehaps, my tolerance to wheezing is lower than yours. And in my case it's also the chest tightness, the chest pain, shortness of breath and the burning in the throat. Since all these symptoms are relatively new to me, they make me very nervous (exhacerbating the original symptoms). Before the asthma ocurred the breathing was never my rate-limiting factor. When you talk about meds, have you used an inhaler? That was all the rage when I raced; people who didn't have asthma would claim otherwise and get prescriptions for inhalers I use inhalers (albuterol and advair), but they don't work. The only reliable "cure" is traveling out of CA or at least away from the coast/central valley. I would not mind having a short painful ~30 min attack after a race, and be done with it. But the "attack" I got after this recent effort has been lasting endlessly for days. This is what ****es me off. |
#4
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I raced for a number of years with pretty nasty allergies and asthma, but
never took any meds for them. Initially they tried all manner of things to target the allergies, but nothing seemed to work (didn't even make me drowsy) so they gave up. I sounded like a steam engine when climbing back then, and that's pretty much the way I sound now. Colder weather definitely makes it worse, no question... below about 60 degrees or so I get some wheezing action going from time to time. Pehaps, my tolerance to wheezing is lower than yours. And in my case it's also the chest tightness, the chest pain, shortness of breath and the burning in the throat. Since all these symptoms are relatively new to me, they make me very nervous (exhacerbating the original symptoms). Before the asthma ocurred the breathing was never my rate-limiting factor. No, this isn't about your tolerance... my asthma is a mild inconvenience; yours sounds far more serious. When you talk about meds, have you used an inhaler? That was all the rage when I raced; people who didn't have asthma would claim otherwise and get prescriptions for inhalers I use inhalers (albuterol and advair), but they don't work. The only reliable "cure" is traveling out of CA or at least away from the coast/central valley. Does your doctor give you any reason why you're not responding to albuterol or advair? --Mike-- Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReactionBicycles.com wrote in message ups.com... I can't imagine that the "cure" (racing while wearing a mask) wouldn't be worse than the illness. yeah, I will look like a cyborg, but... I raced for a number of years with pretty nasty allergies and asthma, but never took any meds for them. Initially they tried all manner of things to target the allergies, but nothing seemed to work (didn't even make me drowsy) so they gave up. I sounded like a steam engine when climbing back then, and that's pretty much the way I sound now. Colder weather definitely makes it worse, no question... below about 60 degrees or so I get some wheezing action going from time to time. Pehaps, my tolerance to wheezing is lower than yours. And in my case it's also the chest tightness, the chest pain, shortness of breath and the burning in the throat. Since all these symptoms are relatively new to me, they make me very nervous (exhacerbating the original symptoms). Before the asthma ocurred the breathing was never my rate-limiting factor. When you talk about meds, have you used an inhaler? That was all the rage when I raced; people who didn't have asthma would claim otherwise and get prescriptions for inhalers I use inhalers (albuterol and advair), but they don't work. The only reliable "cure" is traveling out of CA or at least away from the coast/central valley. I would not mind having a short painful ~30 min attack after a race, and be done with it. But the "attack" I got after this recent effort has been lasting endlessly for days. This is what ****es me off. |
#5
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Does your doctor give you any reason why you're not responding to albuterol
or advair? he tested for several possibilities (incorrect inhaling technique, vocal cord dysfunction, heart disease, sinus infection) , but with no results so far. Actually, he does not know about the recent riding-induced relapse: getting an appointment with the HMO system takes weeks/months. "Call your doctor if..." you hear in commercials is a joke. You can't get qualified urgent care unless it's too late for you. |
#6
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I am a respiratory therapist...who races alot.And uses an inhaler.It
improves my expiratory flows 25%.I have mild airway disease..still get good results racing.. The first thing you need is a Peak Flow Meter to measure your expiratory flows...Objective assessment is almost impossible w/o some numbers...Get one ASAP,some Dr.s give them away. Wearing a mask is not the answer.But there IS undoubtedly an answer to your problems.Alot of info can be obtained online.Discontinuing your inhalers was asking for a reoccurrence...Olympic Golds have been won by athmatics who control their asthma by faithfully following a program...if you truly have Reactive Airway Disease(RAD)ie asthma,then you will need to be very disciplined in dealing with it ...and not treat it only when you have problems....it is then too late...and you suffer the effects.. There is so much more to say on this...but I am out of time. Just my 2 cents,best of luck...east wrote: Does your doctor give you any reason why you're not responding to albuterol or advair? he tested for several possibilities (incorrect inhaling technique, vocal cord dysfunction, heart disease, sinus infection) , but with no results so far. Actually, he does not know about the recent riding-induced relapse: getting an appointment with the HMO system takes weeks/months. "Call your doctor if..." you hear in commercials is a joke. You can't get qualified urgent care unless it's too late for you. |
#7
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Wearing a mask is not the answer.But there IS undoubtedly an answer to
your problems.Alot of info can be obtained online.Discontinuing your inhalers was asking for a reoccurrence...Olympic Golds have been won by athmatics who control their asthma by faithfully following a program...if you truly have Reactive Airway Disease(RAD)ie asthma,then you will need to be very disciplined in dealing with it ...and not treat it only when you have problems....it is then too late...and you suffer the effects.. There is so much more to say on this...but I am out of time. Or out of breath? :) Any recommended resources on the 'net for those who have, or wonder if they do have, an "Reactive Airway Disease?" Or is this something where a little bit of knowledge can be a dangerous thing, and you should immediately see a Doctor? For that matter, are there dangers in not dealing appropriately with an RAD? Long-term lung damage or whatever? --Mike Jacoubowsky Chain Reaction Bicycles www.ChainReaction.com Redwood City & Los Altos, CA USA wrote in message oups.com... I am a respiratory therapist...who races alot.And uses an inhaler.It improves my expiratory flows 25%.I have mild airway disease..still get good results racing.. The first thing you need is a Peak Flow Meter to measure your expiratory flows...Objective assessment is almost impossible w/o some numbers...Get one ASAP,some Dr.s give them away. Wearing a mask is not the answer.But there IS undoubtedly an answer to your problems.Alot of info can be obtained online.Discontinuing your inhalers was asking for a reoccurrence...Olympic Golds have been won by athmatics who control their asthma by faithfully following a program...if you truly have Reactive Airway Disease(RAD)ie asthma,then you will need to be very disciplined in dealing with it ...and not treat it only when you have problems....it is then too late...and you suffer the effects.. There is so much more to say on this...but I am out of time. Just my 2 cents,best of luck...east wrote: Does your doctor give you any reason why you're not responding to albuterol or advair? he tested for several possibilities (incorrect inhaling technique, vocal cord dysfunction, heart disease, sinus infection) , but with no results so far. Actually, he does not know about the recent riding-induced relapse: getting an appointment with the HMO system takes weeks/months. "Call your doctor if..." you hear in commercials is a joke. You can't get qualified urgent care unless it's too late for you. |
#8
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#9
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.... so, to stress this again, I have never discontinued the steroids,
only the agonists. BTW, if you are a therapist, can you recommend anyone in the Bay Area? I am looking for someone who is willing to help. By "willing to help" I mean answering an anxious phone call from me within a couple of days, not weeks/months/never (the latter is my experience with docs so far). |
#10
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I have a great doc who treats me for both allergies and asthma (and I
race). He's also a cyclist and works with lots of other athletes. His name is Stephen Machtinger and he's got offices in both Atherton and San Mateo. 650-306-1010 wrote: ... so, to stress this again, I have never discontinued the steroids, only the agonists. BTW, if you are a therapist, can you recommend anyone in the Bay Area? I am looking for someone who is willing to help. By "willing to help" I mean answering an anxious phone call from me within a couple of days, not weeks/months/never (the latter is my experience with docs so far). |
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