New Study to Help Reduce Asthma Burden in New Zealand

One in six New Zealand adults and one in four of our children experience asthma symptoms This adds up to more than 600000 New Zealanders

Asthma is the most common cause of admission to hospital for children

Hospitalisation rates for asthma have more than doubled in the past 30 years

A report entitled Health New Zealands Untreated Addiction warns that the growing expenditure in health care will rise from 12 billion per year to 45 billion per year by 2026 This expenditure is likely to cripple the economy and in the process of doing so our taxes will rise the government will need to borrow from off shore and other crucial departments for example the Education sector will ultimately have spending slashed

The question that is asked time and time again is how can we stop New Zealand from sliding down this steep slope Instead of focussing on the outcome asthma lets focus on the cause

There is hope

New Study to Help Reduce the Asthma Burden in New Zealand

Doctors from Gisborne have announced a large Buteyko asthma study that will be conducted in the wider Gisborne and Auckland areas in 2012

All published studies of the Buteyko Breathing technique including two published in the New Zealand Medical Journal have shown positive resultsi Some of the findings included

Reductions in reliever medication averaged 80 to 90 per cent

Reductions in preventer medication 40 to 50 per cent

Lung function is maintained despite the large reductions in medication

Fewer symptoms of asthma

Improved quality of life

Seven small studies now point to the effectiveness of the Buteyko breathing technique So much so that serious attention and further studies are both wanted and essential

With the rise in awareness and use of Buteyko the authors of these studies say there is a need for a large community based research project to explore the effectiveness of teaching Buteyko in a general medical practice setting There are many anecdotal reports about life changing improvements with Buteyko as well as a number of randomised controlled trials showing improvements in asthma

In light of the social and economic burden of asthma and the potential that the Buteyko breathing technique can offer in improving this it is clear that advocacy groups such as the Asthma Foundation contributing to research is extremely high

What is Buteyko

Buteyko is a strategy to retrain dysfunctional breathing It is based on the postulation that asthma along with several other disorders is the result of a dysfunctional breathing pattern

Dr Konstantin Buteyko a Russian physician developed the method in the 1940s to treat conditions including asthma allergies sleeping disorders and hypertension He found that hyperventilation overbreathing was a primary cause of these conditions and thus his programme is based on slowing down breathing rates to within normal parameters The programme includes guidelines for correct diaphragmatic breathing and most importantly learning to breathing through the nose

The theory of Buteyko is based on the fact that overbreathing disrupts the balance of oxygen and carbon dioxide in our bodies In the 19th century it was found that carbon dioxide is responsible for the bond between oxygen and haemoglobin the red blood cells If the level of carbon dioxide in the blood is lower than normal this leads to difficulties in releasing the oxygen from the haemoglobin known as the Bohr Effect This ultimately leads to oxygen deprivation in the tissues throughout the body It also leads to the smooth muscles around the airways and blood vessels constricting Dr Buteyko maintained that this is what causes chest tightness and is the main factor in blocked noses Asthma is the bodys way of attempting to reduce the airflow passing through the lungs in order to reduce the loss of carbon dioxide

When breathing is brought back into normal parameters which can be done simply by decreasing the volume were breathing the carbon dioxide can reach the desired level of 65 and asthma symptoms can be relieved Though most people may think of it as a poison carbon dioxide may in fact be responsible for the breath of life

Date : 30 Apr, 2012
Reference : http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/SC1204/S00042/new-study-to-help-reduce-asthma-burden-in-new-zealand.h

Back to News