Study: Current treatments are not effective to treat severe asthma – TheHealthSite


Times of India

Study: Current treatments are not effective to treat severe asthma
TheHealthSite
The immune response that occurs in patients with severe asthma is markedly different than what occurs in milder forms of the lung condition, says a new study by an Indian-origin researcher. These unique features could point the way to new treatments.
Severe asthma fails to respond to treatmentTimes of India
Study could point the way to new treatments for people with severe asthmaNews-Medical.net

all 13 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Study could point the way to new treatments for people with severe asthma – News-Medical.net


Times of India

Study could point the way to new treatments for people with severe asthma
News-Medical.net
The immune response that occurs in patients with severe asthma is markedly different than what occurs in milder forms of the lung condition, according to researchers from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Those unique features could
Study: Current treatments are not effective to treat severe asthmaTheHealthSite
Severe asthma fails to respond to treatmentTimes of India

all 13 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Efficacy and Safety Study of RAGWITEK™ (MK-3641) in Children With Ragweed-Induced Rhinoconjunctivitis With or Without Asthma (MK-3641-008)

Condition:   Rhinitis, Allergic, Seasonal
Interventions:   Biological: MK-3641;   Biological: Placebo;   Drug: Self-injectable epinephrine;   Drug: Albuterol/Salbutamol;   Drug: Loratadine;   Drug: Olopatadine;   Drug: Mometasone furoate monohydrate
Sponsor:   Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp.
Not yet recruiting – verified June 2015

View full post on ClinicalTrials.gov: asthma | received in the last 14 days

Study guides efforts to find new strategies, solutions to fight pediatric asthma – Medical Xpress

Study guides efforts to find new strategies, solutions to fight pediatric asthma
Medical Xpress
Low flu vaccination rates, medication compliance and limited access to primary care providers have contributed to the high pediatric asthma rates in California, say UC Davis pediatricians Ulfat Shaikh and Robert Byrd, who have published an extensive
New Strategies to Fight Pediatric AsthmaHealthNewsDigest.com
UC Davis Study Guides Efforts to Find New Strategies, Solutions to Fight PR Web (press release)

all 3 news articles »

View full post on asthma – Google News