From the Horses Mouth

A recent Lung Foundation Seminar at Chermside had two lovely ladies give their knowledgable tips on coping with chronic breathlessness. Thank you to Lyn McDade and Joanne Smith! Have a try of these top 10:

  1. Understand your limits by listening to your body
  2. Go gently on difficult days but keep going.
  3. Connect with peers, friends and support groups
  4. Stress management and meditation
  5. Avoid foods that increase inflammatory responses in the body
  6. Complimentary medicine pathways
  7. Quiet Time and Prayer
  8. Exercise – walk groups, yoga, massage, hydrotherapy
  9. Self care as a prevention tool – layering for cold sensitivity
  10. Avoid ill acquaintances and high risk situations – busy crowds in flu season!

Asthma Week 2018

Asthma Week this year is about busting myths and getting the facts out there as two thirds of Australians are affected by asthma!

If you:

  • have symptoms more than two days a week
  • use reliever medication more than two days a week
  • do less because of your asthma
  • have symptoms at night or on waking

Then go see your GP for a review as your asthma may not be well controlled.

For asthma support and information call the 1800 ASTHMA Helpline
(1800 278 462)

A Whale of a Time

This is a photo taken (thank you to Tony Kent!) on Fraser island last weekend by a drone. Perfect weather for mum and bub to be doing some relaxed breathing in the shallows.

Have you ever thought about how they breath?

Like us whales have lungs but unlike us they take their air in through their blowhole absorbing up to 90% of the oxygen compared to the 15% we absorb. They are unable to breath through their mouth as they don’t have their trachea/ windpipe connected to their throat like we do.

So next time you are breathing in through your nose and not your mouth for pursed lip breathing, have a thought to the whales that are doing something similar

Retiring Society

Spent the morning at Tricare Mt Gravatt Retirement Village giving a talk on Breath Management and catching up with residents afterwards. Lovely to meet the residents who were talkative, great on the puns and sharing plenty of laughs.

Questions on breathing technique and do we avoid certain movements or modify were the hot topics for the morning.

Thank you for a lovely morning!

Breath Management Class at Local General Medical Practice

I recently ran a breath class at a local medical practice for the purpose of increasing community awareness about breathlessness, how it affects us and how we can manage it. Evaluations were positive as they found many things to relate to and many other things to learn and practice. A great way to engage people that are hesitant to join a regular program in a larger health service.

Factors Affecting Breathlessness: Relaxed Posture

Factors affecting breathlessness of course has to include posture.

Tension in the upper body is one thing that you can start with.

So stand in front of a mirror and take a look after you’ve just done something that has left you puffy. As you catch your breath what can you see  – how are you standing, supporting your arms/shoulders, sitting down, chest heaving, shoulders going up and down???

Now that you know what you are doing normally, try this as an alternative;

Lean forward, support your upper body by leaning on the bench/ back chair or sit and lean on your thighs with your forearms, drop your shoulders and relax as you gradually slow the pace of your breathing.

This will do two things: 

  1. it will relieve the tension between your shoulder girdle and chest to allow for chest expansion
  2. it will release the accessory muscles in your upper body for the action you have been engaged in so they are not being overused.

A Simple Fan to Reduce your Sense of Breathlessness

Breathlessness can be anxiety provoking when trying to get a job done and exert yourself. There is a lot of research that suggests that movement of air across the face and nose can reduce a persons sense of breathlessness and hence their level of anxiety .  https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20471544

The main benefit is that it reduces your recovery time and is a self management  tool you can take anywhere you need it. If you don’t have a hand held fan in the moment then sit by an open window or on the verandah so the breeze crosses your face, especially the nose and mouth, and it may also help.

A hand held fan held 15- 20cm from the face works through cooling the nose and mouth with receptor messages sent to the brain altering the person’s sense of breathlessness, if your nose is blocked or mouth dry then it will be less effective.

The Lung Foundation has fans for sale in its online shop, alternatively they can be found with other retailers such as those specialising in electricals.

Hand-held fan

 

Factors Affecting Breathlessness: Big Tasks

We have been talking about how activity can make you breathless and ways to cope with this.

The second idea is to break up the task. This means to spread it out over several days, do a bit in the morning and then finish after lunch, or do one bit and delegate another bit to a family member or service provider.

For example, cleaning the house can be overwhelming but if you delegate the once a fortnight floor clean to a service and potter each day for 15 min to declutter or dust then the task becomes doable.

Another example is to wash your smalls in a bucket whilst you are seated  in the shower. Give them a swish round with your feet, gentle squeeze and hang on the laundry stand in the sun. Larger items can go in the machine when family drop by to help.

 

 

Factors Affecting Breathlessness: Store Smart

Everyone knows that activity increases our sense of breathlessness especially if there is bending and reaching involved. So how do we make this simpler? How to we make things easier so we can still do the things we want to do?

One idea is storage. The things we use for an activity whether its making a cup of tea or doing the laundry can often be placed in awkward positions so the effort in using the materials is what makes the job hard, not necessarily the job itself.

Store heavy items low and light items high and well used items at waist height. This is a recipe for ease and simplification around the home. this reduces lifting, bending and reaching loads within each activity that you do. For example, keep mugs on a cup rack on the bench and the tea caddy next to the kettle. In the laundry keep heavy laundry containers on a waist high bench and put your basket of wet washing on a chair when hanging on the line. This way you can get to that all important cup of tea a lot more easily.