Pathophysiology of asthma
r Munjal said that the Central Pollution Control Board recorded 10 times increase in suspended particles settling in four to 10 days post Diwali. The curtain of suspended particles causes nasal irritation, sneezing and dripping nose. Sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxide are strongly suspected to be the cause of choking spells, which were noted commonly in those with previous complaints of asthma. Throat irritation is mostly due to the copper constituent of the crackers. Inhaled Zinc causes nausea and vomiting, he added.
He further said that restlessness, irritability anxiety, anger, hypertension and hysteria are other features noted in those exposed to noise and chemical trauma of the pyrotechnics. Whistling type bursting bombs and chain crackers exploded in narrow alleys and closed spaces are the culprits in the maximum number of cases
s Lock in Drug Scandal', or words to that effect, screamed out from newspapers wherever an oval ball is kicked in anger, and if the man at the centre of the storm, Scott MacLeod, owns a cat, it was probably kicked in anger too.The timing of MacLeod's second drug scandal proved poignant, with his club, the Scarlets, playing their final game at Stradey Park last Friday night after 129 years of unbroken service on the famous old turf. If proven guilty of a doping offence, this latest episode could prove the final chapter of MacLeod's professional rugby career, although that, like almost everything else in the sorry tale, is far from clear.When MacLeod first faced the press back in February he looked like a man contemplating the gallows but he had little idea then that the brouhaha surrounding his asthma inhaler was only an aperitif to something very much bigger. The reprimand he received for that error may return to haunt him if he is found to have made a second inadvertent mistake he could yet be banned for two years.Last week the press concentrated almost all their attention on the Scottish international despite the fact that a South African lock by the name of Martin Engelbrecht was caught using the banned steroid Stanozolol while playing for Gran Parma in Italy. This news broke last Tuesday but Engelbrecht could have been sipping a can of Tizer for all the attention he received as the papers instead focused on the player who has yet to fail a test
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