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Alternative Aid for Asthma
Buteyko program stresses a simpler breathing method

By JULIE DAVIDOW
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
Thursday, June 23, 2005

Diagnosed with asthma at 7, Liv Browning had spent her whole life fighting for air.

So, when practitioners of a breathing method called Buteyko told her she was breathing too much, she didn't believe it.

"I thought you're absolutely crazy! When I have asthma, I can't breathe."

Now, eight years later, Browning says the Buteyko Method, which promotes breathing exercises to help asthmatics avoid attacks and reduce their dependence on medications, changed her life.

Buteyko's premise -- that asthma attacks are triggered by over breathing -- is grounded to some extent in what's already known about the disease, said Dr. Teal Hallstrand, a pulmonologist and assistant professor of medicine at the University of Washington.

"There is some evidence that people with asthma ... breathe more than they actually need to," Hallstrand said.

But it's unclear, he added, whether drops in carbon dioxide levels are responsible for asthma attacks, as Buteyko advocates claim.

While Buteyko may be useful in combating asthma, as a relaxation tool, if nothing else, it hasn't been studied carefully enough to understand how or if it works, say Hallstrand and other asthma experts.

"I wouldn't think it's likely to be harmful," Hallstrand said. "I wouldn't want (people with asthma) to do this is lieu of treatments that have been clearly shown to be beneficial for asthma."

Still, Browning is convinced.

In 2000, she started a business called Northwest Buteyko (she later changed the name to Kick Asthma) to teach fellow asthmatics about Buteyko.

Before Buteyko, Browning said, she used an inhaler two to four times a day, blowing through two a month. In the past seven years, she's refilled her prescription only twice.

"It was the only thing I'd ever known," said Browning, 37. "I didn't think there was an opportunity that I could ever really live without asthma."

The method gets its name from Konstantin Buteyko, a Russian physician who developed the breathing program in the 1950s.

The basics of Buteyko involve learning to inhale almost exclusively through your nose to moderate breathing and holding your breath.

Browning encourages clients to continue following their doctors' instructions, but she hopes by integrating Buteyko breathing, they will be able to cut their ties to medications.

Kristin Thomas, 33, first heard about Buteyko three years after an asthma attack landed her in the emergency room.

Thomas woke up so short of breath she couldn't talk. Her husband frantically searched the house for her inhaler, with Thomas pointing and scribbling notes from their bed.

Robin Evans-Agnew, director of programs and advocacy for the American Lung Association's Washington chapter, said there should be more dialogue with patients about alternative therapies for asthma.

"Most people refill their asthma medications about twice after they go home, which is not enough," Evans-Agnew said. "People need to have more choices for controlling their asthma."

About 520,000 people have asthma in Washington.

The American Lung Association includes a discussion of Buteyko in its training on alternative and complementary therapies for asthma educators, but the organization does not recommend the method.

Since that near-fatal attack three years ago, Thomas has stashed emergency inhalers in her purse, both cars and a special place in the house.

But she doesn't relish relying on medications for the rest of her life. It's hard to avoid her attack triggers: dust, pollen, cats, cold weather and stress.

Last month she attended one of Browning's introductory sessions in West Seattle.

Now, when she feels her chest tightening, she uses the Buteyko breathing techniques first. More often than not, she said, the breathing is enough. When the method fails, she reaches for her inhaler.

"I feel like there's a nice balance between the two," Thomas said.

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