You might need a preventer as well as your rescue inhaler. I was pretty much the same as you, chronic asthmatic with many lengthy hospital stays when I was young, then when I was about 8 it practically stopped. I'm now 20 and it has come back with a vengeance. I am taking Seretide and it has worked wonders in controlling my asthma. Talk to a doctor :)
My error. I was think of Advair which I was taking and which would be included in the warning because of it including salmeterol.
Yes, but your comments said that the warning was on the ICS component. It isn't. It is on the LABA component only. To quote you, "I am wary of inhaled steroids because I have had serious side effect that were worse than the ailment it was supposed to treat. So if you are prescribed something like that, ask if there are alternatives. The FDA sent out warning a year ago about inhaled steroids."
Salmeterol is an LABA medication which is usually, but not always, combined with an inhaled steroid. Advair contains both salmeterol and a steroid.
Here is a link to the FDA warning dated February 18, 2010.
http://www.fda.gov/Drugs/DrugSafety/PostmarketDrugSafetyInformationforPatientsandProviders/ucm200776.htm
The warning is ONLY on the use of LABA medications to treat asthma. LABA's are long acting beta2 agonists (broncho-dilaters that last 12 hours). IT DOES NOT INVOLVE ICS (inhaled corticosteroids) except to say that LABA's should not be used by asthmatics without concurrent treatment with an ICS.
It was last February. I don't remember it exactly. I believe it also involved salmeterol, which is a component of Advair. It was recommended that they be used when nothing else worked, and then only for short periods. I do know from talking to people that inhaled steroids are often prescribed willy nilly for minor complaints. My brother told me he had a little mucus (very minor chronic bronchitis which didn't bother him much) and his doctor gave him Advair. I hit the roof, and suggested he take B5. He, like most people, did not know the dangers of that medication. Apparently his doctor didn't either. (Or has been watching TV commercials.)
Can you give the reference for the warning against inhaled steroids? The only warning I know about is against long acting broncho dilaters used by asthmatics (still fine for COPD patients) without an inhaled steroids. There are several reasons for that warning. The main one is that too many people use them as rescue inhalers when they don't work quickly enough for that purpose.
Thanks for any info you can provide.
I am wary of inhaled steroids because I have had serious side effect that were worse than the ailment it was supposed to treat. So if you are prescribed something like that, ask if there are alternatives. The FDA sent out warning a year ago about inhaled steroids. There are natural anti-inflammatories that can help. I take mullein (in a liquid form), vitamin B5 and vitamin C. Marshmallow is also good. Some Chinese herbs are excellent, but you have to have a doctor get them for you. I also have a portable nebulizer which I prefer to the rescue inhalers. The reason is that I can take as little as I need. Sometimes just a few puffs will do it. It is very small and fits into my purse.
Asthma can worsen or you could just be in a flare. You need to visit with your doctor to see what changes need to be made in your treatment plan. It sounds like you probably need a maintenance inhaler now. If it just a flare, an inhaled steroid could clear you right up and feeling like your self in no time.
Feel better.
God bless.