Asthma
Overactive immune disorder where the airways inflame.

Being a common lung disease, Asthma is an inflammation of the airway wall in the throat. This causes airflow obstruction with leads to a problem for the person to breath and usually causes wheezing when the person exhales.
Asthma is now broken down into two types: extrinsic and intrinsic. Extrinsic asthma is when there is an increase in the level of the production of antibody IgE, and is usually considered an allergic condition. Intrinsic Asthma is due to outside factors such as toxic chemicals, cold air, exercise, emotional upset, and exercise, which causes a bronchial reaction. In both types, the immune system overreacts to triggers and the bronchus tightens due to inflammation and the mucous production to line the bronchial tubes is increases causing mucous to build in the lungs.
Solutions for Asthma
It is now known that Asthma is one and a half times greater in children who were not breast fed, instead they were given formula. Further research shows the breast milk contains 5 of the 8 essential glyconutrients. Supplementing glyconutrients has been lessening people's asthma flare-ups and the duration of them.
Glyconutrients are like the alphabet language of our cells. Instead of using 26 letters, our bodies use 8 hexagonal glyconutrients to communicate to each other. Every cell in our body requires an adequate amount of these glyconutrients to communicate correctly. When they are missing, they cannot communicate correctly, and this causes the cells to malfunction and become unhealthy leading to diseases and disorders. Glyconutrients are known worldwide to improve basic body physiology, improve the immune system functions, and improve organ functions in our body. For all people, not just those with Asthma, glyconutrients are vital to our health for cellular communication.
The reduced dietary intake of antioxidants over the past twenty years is now directly related to the major increase in the rate of Asthma. It is know the antioxidants are a vital defense mechanism for the lungs. Free radicals and other oxidizing molecules can stimulate bronchial constriction and increase reactivity to other agents, and antioxidants play a major role in killing free radicals.