Are Asthma and Anxiety related?

 

Are Asthma and Anxiety related?
Are Asthma and Anxiety related?


The relationship between asthma and the mind has been talked about for a long time. This is because, in everyday life, it is very easy to notice that association. Most obvious is the link between a state of nervousness and an asthma attack. However, it is not very clear what science has found in this regard. Regardless of the relation, you will need an inhaler, and you can buy the Clenil Inhaler, the Spiriva Inhaler or the Symbicort inhaler online at Pharmacy Planet.

Asthma has been linked to psychological factors for many years. In the treatise on Asthma by Moses Maimonides (an important physician and philosopher in medieval thought) this disease is defined as "difficulty in breathing or pain in the chest" suggesting changes in behaviour as one of the measures to cure it.


The scientific literature describes a higher frequency of presentation of emotional disorders in people with asthma, with special emphasis on those with depression and/or anxiety. However, whether or not there is a specific association between anxiety disorders and/or depression and asthma remains an unresolved question.

A study has been conducted to test the hypothesis that anxiety and/or depressive disorders are conditions associated with asthma and whether there is a two-way (two-way) link between emotional disorders and asthma.

Researchers conclude that anxiety disorders, among emotional disorders, are the most significant and unequivocal diagnosis associated with asthma, especially if it is not adequately controlled.

Having an anxiety disorder carries an almost 4 times greater risk of developing asthma, particularly uncontrolled and more severe asthma. Similarly, having asthma carries a two times greater risk of suffering from an anxiety disorder. This confirms a bidirectional relationship between anxiety and asthma, which means that either of them can be a cause or consequence of the other, although it cannot be excluded that there are some common mechanisms in their origin (etiopathogenesis), given their frequent association.

However, this study does not confirm an association between asthma and depressive disorders.

In any case, the evidence of the existence of a close link between the two conditions confirms the need for a multidisciplinary approach, not only in research but also, and given the importance, in daily clinical practice in terms of evaluation and treatment of the asthmatic patient.

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