
Bronchial asthma is a chronic respiratory inflammation disorder involving multiple cells (e. G. Acidic particle cells, fat cells, lymphocytes, meso-particle cells, upper-cortal cells, etc.) and cell formations, which leads to an increase in the high-reactiveness of the aromatic tract, often with widespread variability of reversible air currents, and with repeated signs of asthma, air rush, chest depression or cough. In contrast, the copd is a disease characterized by the restriction of less than fully reversible air currents, which are often exacerbated by the restriction. Often due to the effects of harmful particles or gases (mainly smoking), the lung has an abnormal inflammation response. Asthma and copd are different clinical diseases, but there are similarities or overlaps in many ways: one part of the asthma patient's air flow can also evolve...

— the lawChronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseThe hotspot problem




