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ARTICLE |

THE TREATMENT OF ASTHMA

JAMA. 1929;93(10):772-773. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02710100034017.
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The present-day treatment of asthma can scarcely be described as involving any well standardized or universally dependable procedure. This statement will probably be admitted by most physicians, even if the newer studies on the interrelations of bronchiospasm to anaphylaxis are taken into account. Detectable allergy at best accounts for only a fraction of the cases of asthma that come under observation. A recent careful compilation of more than a thousand asthmatic patients in an eastern clinic has indicated a possible relation to some sort of extrinsic antigen in somewhat less than half of them at most. This includes such factors as "pollen asthma" and "animal asthma." Such failures to explain the disorder on the basis of extrinsic exciting causes make it easier to appreciate why the search for foci of infection as the possible "trigger mechanism" has been so active.

It is doubtless true that many patients with asthma have

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