Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum.  ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
 | 

Flu with Asthma

by philstar22, Feb 09, 2007 12:00AM
I am an asthmatic who recently contracted the flu. Normally, I wouldn't be worried, but this seems to be a case that is worse than I usually get.

The problem is that I'm out of reach of a doctor at the moment. I'm taking my regular meds as well as some cold meds, but they don't seem to be doing the job.

The biggest problem has been my breathing. It hasn't reached threatening levels, but it has been concistantly low on the peek flow for several days. I have been taking the maximum dose it says on the inhalor box, which is 8 puffs a day. That is stretching it pretty thin. Is it possible to take more than that? Is there anything else I can do to help my breathing? I have no access to a nebulizer.

If you have any other suggestions, that would be great. I really don't want this to turn dangerous as we have no easy doctor access.

Member Comments (3)

by philstar22, Feb 09, 2007 12:00AM
I forgot to ask one other thing. What is the maximum tilenol dose? I've been taking a cold medicine that has about 700 mg plus a decongestant and an antihistimine. The tilenol doesn't seem to be helping my headache, though. Can I safely take more than that?

by PlateletGal, Feb 09, 2007 12:00AM
To: philstar22

I know having asthma and then getting a cold or flu can easily lead to a URI.

One trick I learned from a Naturopath is to put a few drops of liquid cayenne pepper (you can google it for more info) in my water. Cayenne is a natural dilator, so it opens up your airways... just like your inhaler does.

It really does work... at least for me anyway!

by hava, Feb 13, 2007 12:00AM
You need more oxygen for the lungs and the head.By doing the breathing exercise more oxygen will get into the lungs and blood and so help your asthma and headache.Try it, feel the benefit and help two more people to get better by telling them.
Anulom Vilom - Deep Breath-in through left nostril keeping right nostril closed
then  - Breath-out through right nostril keeping left nostril closed
then   -Deep Breath-in through right nostril keeping left nostril closed
then   - Breath-out through left nostril keeping right nostril closed
and repeat this cycle for upto 15 minutes. Maximum 3 times day.
After a few months, the need for medication will decrease.After you feel better continue the breathing once a day.
Related discussions
Post Comment
To
Comment
Post Comment
Recent Activity
mami1323 commented on Darn Holidays
15 mins ago
msniki412 commented on Darn Holidays
25 mins ago
Darn Holidays
1 hr ago by mami1323
Headache/Migraine Tracker: Exam time
1 hr ago by Tammy2009
Asthma Tracker: stress = asthma
1 hr ago by Tammy2009
mami1323 commented on DH is joining the Nav...
1 hr ago
margypops commented on photo
2 hrs ago
margypops commented on photo
2 hrs ago
RSS Expert Activity
Sleep Apnea and Nighttime Urination...
3 hrs ago by Steven Y Park, MD
Body Builders, Kidney Failure, and ...
3 hrs ago by Steven Y Park, MD
When Your Cold Is Not A Cold
Dec 09 by Steven Y Park, MD
Community Members