Bronchial Asthma (also called asthma) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways characterized by recurrent episodes of wheezing, breathlessness, chest tightness, and coughing — especially at night or early morning. These symptoms are caused by reversible airway obstruction, bronchial hyper-responsiveness, and underlying inflammation.
It is triggered by allergens (dust mites, pollen, pet dander, mold), irritants (cold air, smoke, pollution, strong odors), respiratory infections, exercise, stress, weather changes, or certain medications (NSAIDs, beta-blockers).
In Hyderabad and many Indian cities, asthma is very common due to high pollution, dust, pollen, and sudden weather changes (especially during monsoon and winter).
Important disclaimer Asthma is a potentially life-threatening condition. Severe attacks (status asthmaticus) can cause respiratory failure and death if not treated promptly. Homeopathy has no high-quality scientific evidence (no large RCTs or systematic reviews accepted by GINA, NAEPP, or major respiratory societies) that it can reduce the Apnea-Hypopnea Index (AHI), improve oxygen saturation, prevent airway collapse, or treat asthma at any severity level.
It is never a substitute for:
- Rescue inhaler (salbutamol) during acute attacks
- Controller medications (inhaled corticosteroids ± long-acting beta-agonists) for persistent asthma
- Emergency care (nebulization, oxygen, systemic steroids, magnesium, ICU) for severe exacerbation
Never rely on homeopathy alone during an asthma attack — use your prescribed reliever inhaler immediately and seek emergency help if:
- Severe breathlessness, unable to speak in full sentences
- No relief after 4–6 puffs of salbutamol every 20 min × 3 doses
- Silent chest, cyanosis, confusion, drowsiness
Consult a pulmonologist or allergist for proper diagnosis (spirometry with bronchodilator reversibility, peak flow monitoring, allergy testing, FeNO if available) and GINA-based stepwise management.
Common Symptoms of Bronchial Asthma
- Recurrent episodes of wheezing (high-pitched whistling sound during breathing out)
- Shortness of breath, chest tightness, or feeling of suffocation
- Dry or productive cough (often worse at night or early morning)
- Symptoms worse at night, early morning, after exercise, exposure to triggers (dust, smoke, pollen, cold air, strong smell, viral infection)
- Chest heaviness or pain during attacks
- Difficulty sleeping due to cough/breathlessness
- In severe attacks: rapid breathing, accessory muscle use, inability to speak, cyanosis
Homeopathic Medicines for Bronchial Asthma (Supportive / Symptomatic Only)
Remedies are chosen based on trigger, time of aggravation, type of breathing, anxiety, and modalities. They are never a replacement for reliever/controller inhalers or emergency care.
- Arsenicum Album The most frequently indicated remedy in acute asthma attacks with anxiety and restlessness. Key indications: Sudden severe wheezing and dyspnea worse midnight–2 a.m.; great anxiety/fear of suffocation/death; restlessness (must sit up or change position); chilly yet desires warmth; thirst for small sips frequently; burning in chest; suits anxious, exhausted patients during night attacks triggered by dust/cold air. Typical potency and dose (acute attack support): 30C — 3–5 pellets every 10–15 minutes during severe attack (max 6–8 doses or until relief); then reduce to every 1–2 hours. Always use reliever inhaler first — homeopathy is adjunct only.
- Blatta Orientalis Specific for asthma triggered by dust, cockroaches, or urban pollution (very relevant in Hyderabad). Key indications: Asthma worse in dusty environment or from cockroach exposure; wheezing, shortness of breath, chest oppression; suits allergic asthma with prominent dust/pollution trigger. Typical potency and dose: 30C — 3–5 pellets 2–3 times daily during dusty/pollution exposure periods (short-term preventive/supportive); or 200C single dose before high-risk exposure.
- Natrum Sulphuricum For asthma worse in damp/rainy/humid weather (common in Hyderabad monsoons). Key indications: Wheezing/shortness of breath worse in damp/rainy weather; must hold chest while coughing; greenish/ropey expectoration; morning aggravation; suits humidity-triggered asthma with liver/spleen sensitivity. Typical potency and dose: 30C or 200C — 3–5 pellets 1–2 times daily during monsoon/wet weather flares (short-term); 200C single dose monthly for constitutional support.
- Ipecacuanha (Ipecac) For spasmodic cough with nausea and vomiting. Key indications: Violent, spasmodic cough with gagging/nausea/vomiting; clean tongue despite nausea; suffocation sensation; loose mucus hard to raise; worse warmth/eating; suits asthma attacks with prominent nausea and spasmodic component. Typical potency and dose: 30C — 3–5 pellets every 15–30 minutes during acute spasmodic attack (short-term 4–8 doses max).
- Antimonium Tartaricum (Ant Tart) For rattling, wet chest with difficult expectoration. Key indications: Coarse rattling/whistling in chest; great accumulation of mucus but very little comes up despite effort; suffocative attacks; drowsiness/sleepiness during cough; worse lying flat, better sitting/leaning forward; suits “wet” asthma with weak expulsion and drowsiness. Typical potency and dose: 30C — 3–5 pellets every 2–4 hours during acute rattling phase (short-term 3–7 days); reduce as mucus clears.
General notes on use:
- Acute asthma attack: low potencies (30C), repeated frequently (every 10–30 min) for a very short time (hours only) while using reliever inhaler and seeking medical help if needed
- Chronic preventive/supportive: higher potencies (200C/1M) given infrequently (weekly/monthly) as constitutional treatment
- Perceived reduction in attack frequency, severity, or trigger sensitivity may be noticed over weeks to months if remedy matches
- Must be combined with:
- Inhaled controller medication (ICS ± LABA) as prescribed
- Reliever inhaler (salbutamol) always available
- Asthma action plan
- Trigger avoidance (dust, smoke, pollen, pollution masks in Hyderabad)
- Regular pulmonologist follow-up (spirometry, peak flow monitoring)
Re-evaluate with pulmonologist if:
- Attacks become more frequent, severe, or night-time
- Reliever use increases (>2–3 times/week)
- Lung function declines
- No perceived benefit after 6–12 weeks of constitutional treatment
Professional homeopathic prescribing may offer supportive symptom relief in mild–moderate asthma, but the foundation of asthma management remains inhaled corticosteroids, relievers, trigger control, and specialist care. Seek pulmonologist evaluation for accurate diagnosis, severity classification (GINA), and personalized treatment plan.