Treatments to Target Asthma and Psoriasis
Treating the Immune System
Both psoriasis and asthma involve an overactive inflammatory response, so scientists are researching therapies that target the immune system rather than the superficial symptoms. For psoriasis, the focus is on proteins that limit your body’s production of certain T cells believed to feed the inflammation.
The specific immune pathway is different for allergic asthma, but the same basic focus is the same: isolate the problematic pathway, then find a way to interfere with the messages (which are causing the inflammation). It’s a relatively new approach, but the medical community is hopeful that immune treatment can bring big changes in prognosis.
Since there’s still a lot to uncover about inflammatory diseases, it’s difficult to know what the best approach will be to treat asthma and psoriasis. In turn, it’s not uncommon for doctors to consider a multiple treatments to manage the diseases simultaneously.
Can Allergy Treatments help?
Asthma has a few very well-known triggers, which also happen to be common allergens: mold, dust, pet dander, smoke, and vermin are at the top of the list. In turn, a major measure in any asthma management plan is to limit your exposure to allergens, and learn to avoid all of your unique triggers.
Although experts insist that there is no proven connection between allergies and psoriasis, it may be worth your while to track which environmental irritants trigger your psoriasis symptoms, too, or what activities worsen both your breathing and skin plaques.
Although allergens may not be able to explain the link, the two inflammatory conditions do share a few common triggers that you should keep in mind, like:
- Stress. Emotional upheaval and anxious situations can increase rapid breathing can lead to an asthma attack, especially if yelling, laughing or crying is involved. As for psoriasis, many patients report stress as the leading cause of their skin flare-ups.
- Cold, dry air. Winter weather can be disastrous for your skin, but the biting cold can also irritate your airways suddenly and severely, leading to an asthma attack. It can be more difficult to keep your symptoms at manageable levels, as well, which can means more frequent discomforts.
- Infections. Falling ill with a viral or bacterial infection can send your body into defensive mode, and that response could surface in a number of ways. Though your immune system will eventually fight off the illness, certain infections have been known to lead to some types of psoriasis, and respiratory infections are the most common cause of asthma symptoms leading to serious flare-ups.
If you suspect that you may be living with asthma and psoriasis, it’s important to bring your concerns to your doctor and get to the heart of the matter.
Even though both psoriasis and asthma involve the immune system, each disorder can manifest in different forms, and whether you have psoriatic arthritis, allergic asthma or non-allergic asthma can determine your best course of treatment.