But no one had specifically looked at the effect of a fatty
diet on asthma.
Not exact matches
Also I had given up dairy 20 years prior to that (to feel better) and then months after that, I noticed my allergy symptoms had gone down about 85 % and I now after being
on a gluten free
diet I hardly have any
asthma attacks now or migraines!!!
Heather suffered from allergy - induced
asthma and was
on a restricted
diet, regular medication, supplements and allergy injections as a child.
Nevertheless, I went
on a brown rice and tea
diet for ten days and
on the eighth day my
asthma went away and I could breathe without medication for the first time since I was a child.
And lactobacillus probiotics may actually help with childhood
asthma, which may help explain why children raised
on largely organic vegetarian
diets may have a lower prevalence of allergic reactions.
Due to the unlimited amounts of veggies, and fruits in moderation (due to high sugar content), permitted
on the Paleo
diet, your body will be slightly alkaline — meaning that diseases and symptoms of acid / alkaline imbalance (osteoporosis, kidney stones, hypertension, stroke,
asthma, insomnia, motion sickness, inner ear ringing, and
asthma) will improve.
This may explain why «a subgroup of the population who have increased respiratory tract mucus production, find that many of their symptoms, including
asthma, improve
on a dairy elimination
diet.»
However, if this is not the case, then the only other thing that has significantly changed in my life is that I'm eating a lot fewer carbs — yet everything I've read (and not just
on this site) is that a low - carb
diet should help
asthma, not make it worse (I did not have much weight to lose when I did the Two Week Test, but over the last few months, I've lost that little bit of extra weight and I've certainly lost fat and gained muscle, and I feel healthier — apart from the
asthma — than before, so I would say a low - carb
diet is working for me).
but my question is, I have
asthma and have been
on the paleo
diet for a month now for weight lost purposes.All was good and I have managed to loose about 2 kg in the month
on paleo
diet.I was very strict with only veges as my source for carbs at about 50g with no starches at all.As I am Asian, this was a burden for me as I eat rice alot!I found that although I feel good
on this
diet, ie less snoring, more alert n energy no more ringing in the ears at nite, BUT I was using my ventolin inhaler more frequently
on this
diet than previously.I tend to feel difficulty in breathing after eating n need to use my ventolin inhaler more.Does this relates to what u said regarding mucus production and the need to eat safe starches?Could this be the reason for me?Any help would be appreciated!
Makeup artist Sasha Plavsic's brother Zachary suffered from severe
asthma growing up, prompting their mother to search for a cure primarily through
diet, so the line's focus
on non-toxic ingredients — the skin is the body's largest organ, after all — has been critical to the business.
More and more of my feline patients were
on one or more prescription drugs and / or
diets to try to help them with the diseases I encountered day - to - day in feline practice: recurrent bladder (lower urinary) problems, obesity, diabetes, chronic vomiting and / or diarrhea, chronic constipation,
asthma, skin and ear problems, to name a few.
Feline
Asthma / Allergic Airway Disease: Many cats have had their respiratory symptoms (coughing / difficulty breathing) subside considerably, or disappear completely, once they were placed
on a grain - free canned food
diet, or a meat - based homemade
diet.
She also clearly states that the correlation she's seen between
diet change and improvement in some of her asthmatic patients is based
on her experience in her feline practice, and that it is her opinion that
diets high in grain trigger an inflammatory response that MAY be a trigger for
asthma and / or allergies.
In over two decades of feline practice, I have attended many continuing education seminars
on feline
asthma and rarely heard
diet discussed as a potential cause or trigger for the condition.