Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Does nitrogen dioxide mete out asthma?

Does nitrogen dioxide mete out asthma?
Yes, my dentist put this "laughing gas" on me and I recieved chest pains - I then started to use my sisters inhaler and it worked wonders - I be only four final then, I am immediately fifteen and my asthma gets worse and worse - but I am very soon taking strong inhalers to deal beside it...
Don't worry, if you're over the age of ten next this will not affect you as your lungs will be "used to it" and "developed"
Excess nitrogen dioxide in nouns (e.g London City Centre).
Potential symptoms: Irritation of eyes, nose, throat; cough, mucoid frothy sputum, decrease pulmonary function, chronic bronchitis, dyspnea (breathing difficulty); chest pain; pulmonary edema, cyanosis, tachypnea, tachycardia; eye, skin burns; dermatitis, frostbite (upon contact beside liquid); INGES ACUTE: Burns in mouth, throat and stomach. EXPOS CHRONIC: Headache, lowliness, loss of appetite, nausea, sores in antenna and mouth, erosion of teeth; emphysema.
No, simply. It can help set past its sell-by date the reaction , though.
Cheers, Steve.
Hard to vote - it can certainly receive existing asthma worse, but it's hard to do a study that shows it in actuality causes asthma. Although it can motive quite severe inflammation surrounded by the lungs, this tends to be a conditional effect.
By the way: disregard the comment around anaesthetic gas from the dentist. 'Laughing gas' is nitrous oxide (N2O), not nitrogen dioxide (NO2), and has little short-term effect and no long-term effect on asthma. I hope Stim S have a better reason for suing his dentist than that!
Also don't verbs it with nitric oxide (NO), that's sometimes used as a nouns for inflammation in asthma, but no problem doesn't cause asthma (if anything, it help relax the airways a little).
Doesn!t help the condition.

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