Related Articles
- Exercise-Induced Asthma in Swimmers. Nessel, Edward H. // Swim Magazine;May/Jun2003, Vol. 19 Issue 3, p32
Discusses exercise-induced asthma in swimmers.
- Losing Your Wind? Geraci, Ron // Men's Health;Dec99, Vol. 14 Issue 10, p54
Provides information on exercise-induced asthma.
- Every breath you take. // American Fitness;Nov/Dec98, Vol. 16 Issue 6, p10
Defines exercise-induced asthma. Its cause; Symptoms; Demographics of exercise-induced asthma.
- Exercise induced asthma: real or imagined? Helms, P. J. // Archives of Disease in Childhood;Sep2005, Vol. 90 Issue 9, p886
Presents information on exercise induced asthma. Information on causative factors of asthma. Discussion on relation between asthma and exercise; Focus on major features of asthma.
- Exercise for asthma patients. Disabella, Vincent; Sherman, Carl // Physician & Sportsmedicine;Jun98, Vol. 26 Issue 6, p75
Focuses on asthma patients, while highlighting exercise for asthma management. Standard exercise recommendation for asthma management; Benefits of exercise to asthma patients; Requirement of the capacity to exercise; Background information on the prescription of exercise to asthma patients;...
- Exercise-induced asthma. // British Medical Journal;2/2/1980, Vol. 280 Issue 6210, p271
Evaluates the occurrence of asthma brought about by exercise in Great Britain. Identification of other reactive factors for asthma; Importance of exercise-induced asthma clinically; Influence of the type of exercise on the bearing of asthma.
- Classification of asthma. // Patient Care;2/15/1999, Vol. 33 Issue 3, p156
Focuses on the classification of asthma according to disease etiology. Allergic asthma; Occupational asthma; Exercise-induced asthma; Cough-equivalent asthma; Potentially fatal asthma.
- Exercise can bring on an asthma attack. Donohue, Paul G. // Adirondack Daily Enterprise;7/24/2010, Vol. 117 Issue 174, pB5
The article offers health advice concerning exercise-induced asthma.
- Exercise can bring on asthma attacks. Donohue, Paul G. // Adirondack Daily Enterprise;3/13/2010, Vol. 117 Issue 62, pB5
The article provides an answer to a question related to exercise-induced asthma.
- Immediate constraint-induced movement therapy causes local hyperthermia that exacerbates cerebral cortical injury in rats. DeBow, Suzanne B.; McKenna, John E.; Kolb, Bryan; Colbourne, Frederick // Canadian Journal of Physiology & Pharmacology;Apr2004, Vol. 82 Issue 4, p231
Constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT), which involves restraint of the nonimpaired arm coupled with physiotherapy for the impaired arm, lessens impairment and disability in stroke patients. Surprisingly, immediate ipsilateral forelimb immobilization exacerbates brain injury in rats. We...