Asthma

Asthma Home - Articles about Asthma - More Asthma Resources - Asthma RSS Feed

Asthma Home>Asthma Articles>Cardiac Asthma: Inside and Out

 

Cardiac Asthma: Inside and Out

A not-so-famous term, cardiac asthma is very less used these days. People in earlier times mistook this disease and its relevance with pulmonary edema or fluid in the lungs and only in the later years it became clear that a cardiac asthma can occur even without having that fluid in the lungs.

Cardiac asthma, in many situations, is a clinical condition brought about by severe reflexive blocking and may be by edema of the lungs. It is an asthmatic-type breathing caused by sudden blockage of the pulmonary circulation.

Both cardiac asthma and pulmonary edema are symptoms of coming heart failure. Both situations are related and have similar consequences. They usually work one after another.
It is a life-threatening condition and you should seek medical advice immediately if you see or experience any symptoms.
Internal Complications - Problems
Cardiac asthma is usually due to a major mechanical fault of the heart and may pose to be life threatening rapidly. It usually occurs when the left part of the heart has a disproportion between its work load and work capacity suddenly. This inconsistency leads to many disorders, one of which is this cardiac asthma.
With this asthma, the reduced pumping effectiveness of the heart leads to a build up of the fluid in the lungs. This build up of the fluid causes the air passages to narrow up and eventually cause wheezing and other symptoms.
External Complications - Symptoms
Many people think that cardiac asthma is the same as to various other primary diseases of the lungs which cause wheezing or panting. This is however wrong, and can be differed by ways of clinical tests, for better understanding of the patients and their families.
The easiest way to distinguish cardiac asthma from other types of asthmas is through the symptoms. Some of the main symptoms are shortness of breath with or without wheezing, increased rapid and shallow breathing, increased blood pressure and heart rate, and a feeling of uneasiness.
Other than that, in certain cases, cardiac asthma causes people to wake up breathless a few hours after sleeping, and have to sit upright to properly breathe again. This is due to lying down too long. When people with this disease do so, the fluid would accumulate in the lungs and lead to shortness of breath. Not stopping there, this disease also causes swollen ankles which worsen rapidly.
These symptoms are very important to distinguish this disease from others and give the proper medications and treatments, which are mainly focused on controlling the night coughs, control of the edema, control of inflow load and the amount of residual blood in the left ventricle, and so on.

More Asthma Articles

Asthma Information
While your physician is probably the single most valid source of asthma information, there exists other numerous sources to which you can turn. There are special agencies and organizations, information...
What you should look out for with an asthma attack
No one knows for sure how a person contracts asthma. There are logical guesses given the scientific information that medical professionals are working with, but there is no actual set doctrine of how asthma...
An Asthma Doctor and Thier Responsibility
A doctors job is not easy; especially being an asthma doctor is a very challenging and sometimes an overwhelming job. Asthma is a very delicate illness with fatal consequences should it not be treated...
Exactly What is Asthma?
Asthma is a lung disease that several different people have and it can also be life threatening. This type of a disease can cause problems with breathing. The different problems that come with breathing...
Asthma and Acid Reflux: It’s Not All Heartburn and Wheezing
If you are living with asthma, you know how difficult it can be to be around specific triggers that can cause an attack. A friends cat or dog, or even dandelions are dangers to your breathing, but imagine...

 







Asthma © All Right Reserved
BOOK MARK

Asthma - Cardiac asthma