Have you ever wondered what the term "bronchial asthma" meant? Asthma, a chronic inflammatory illness of the airways that causes recurrent "attacks" of coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath, and chest tightness, is what is meant when people refer to bronchial asthma. Asthma and other respiratory conditions like chronic sinusitis, middle ear infections, and nasal polyps are all closely associated with allergies. Most intriguingly, a recent study of asthmatics revealed that individuals who also had allergies were considerably more likely to experience asthma attacks at night, miss work, and need stronger prescriptions to control their symptoms. Mast cells, eosinophils, and T lymphocytes are linked to asthma. The cells that cause allergies and emit histamine-like substances are called mast cells. Histamine is the chemical that makes your nose runny and drippy when you have a cold or hay fever, constricts your airways when you have asthma, and makes your skin itchy when you have a skin allergy. White blood cells known as eosinophils are connected to allergic diseases. White blood cells called T lymphocytes are also connected to allergies and inflammation.
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