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Is it a Childhood Asthma Symptom?
Asthma is an obstructive respiratory condition characterized by recurrent
attacks of shortness of breath, wheezing, rapid breathing and an irritated
cough. Between the ages of 3 and 8 years asthma can be found in children.
Wheezing, a whistle type sound, is caused when the air flows into
the lungs during an asthma attack. When the child exhales normally,
mild wheezing happens, and when he exhales deeply, more severe wheezing
sounds are heard. In case of extreme asthma, wheezing may be absent
as no air is passing through airways.
Coughing in asthma may be chronic or recurring, and worsens at night
or the early morning hours. From time to time a cough may be the single
symptom of asthma, particularly in any asthma aggravated by exercise,
or asthma occurring in nighttime only. In nocturnal asthma a cough
occurs more often than not in the early hours of the morning.
Tightness and pain in the chest are mostly found in exercise induced
asthma. A child may feel tightness and pain in his chest and have no
other symptoms of asthma in this case. Other childhood asthma symptoms
include
Breathlessness
Rapid breathing
Flaring of the nostrils when breathing in
Interrupted talking
Asthma symptom during a milder asthma episode may include the child
feeling breathlessness during an asthma attack, or after a simple physical
walk they may feel restless.
During a moderately severe episode of asthma attack, a child may feel
breathless during speech; a baby with asthma may have a softer, shorter
cry, and the child may not be able to finish the usual amount of their
feeding.
During more relentless episode of asthma this type of asthma attack,
a symptom children may feel includes being out of breathe while at
rest, talking in words but not in sentences. Infants will not feed
in this situation or may be restless during feeding. |