from The Daily Mail UK, 16th May 16 1996
by Jessica Fisher, Good Health article.
New breathing technique aims to replace drugs.
After being warned by the government to stay at home to avoid the  recent bad air pollution, Britain’s 3 million asthma sufferers will be  eager to hear of a treatment that has just started in this country.
The Buteyko method teaches asthmatics to control their symptoms using a breathing technique, rather than conventional drugs.
Among the first British patients was Jonathan Aitken, Treasury Chief  Secretary, who was treated by the method’s senior practitioner,  Christopher Drake. Mr Drake has bought the Buteyko Breath Reconditioning  Technique from Australia, where it is undergoing the first clinical  trials.
A late-onset asthmatic, Mr Aitken had for the past 5 years suffered  typical asthma symptoms, including attacks of coughing and  breathlessness. Since he started practising the Buteyko method three  months ago, his symptoms have become minimal and he no longer uses any  reliever medication. ‘I have tried plenty of treatments, but this is the  only one that has really worked,’ he says. ‘I think it is a remarkable  one that could help many people’.
One in 20 British adults suffers from asthma, a chronic and incurable  disease affecting the airways. Its prevalence is increasing worldwide,  and in the UK it causes 7 million days off work and kills someone every  four hours.
The primary cause is unknown, but once the condition develops – which  can be at any age – symptoms can be triggered be secondary factors such  as cold air, exercise, allergens and stress, which cause the airways to  contract.
Most asthmatics rely on conventional medicine to control symptoms.  Preventive corticosteroids act slowly to reduce inflammation, and  bronchodilators, such as Ventolin, open the airways and bring instant  relief during an attack. Severe asthmatics may be prescribed steroid  tablets.
Asthma prescriptions cost the NHS (UK pounds) 350m a year (a figure  which has doubled over the past decade), yet many specialists and  organisations such as the National Asthma Campaign believe there is no  real alternative.
Mr. Drake, however, is critical of conventional drugs because they  treat the symptoms and not the cause. The Buteyko method is based on the  findings of a Russian scientist 40 years ago, that asthma is caused by a  simple but fundamental and unrecognised disorder: long-term  over-breathing.
‘Asthmatics are chronically hyperventilating all the time’ says Mr  Drake. Imagine if our body temperature was five times what it should  be...we’d be dead. Well, some asthmatics breathe five times more than they  should.’
This, he explains, has wide repercussions within the body, the most  significant being a loss of carbon dioxide, the body’s own  bronchodilator, which ultimately leads to the symptoms of asthma.
The Buteyko method uses (reduced) breathing to reverse the condition.  Carbon dioxide levels are restored and the symptoms disappear.
The method is simple but it takes commitment to change the breathing  habits of a lifetime.
‘Generally, after a couple of days people can  learn to control their asthma attacks without bronchodilators.’ says Mr.  Drake. ‘After a few more days, attacks are reduced and, if the  technique is maintained, patients can become asymptomatic.’
Mr Drake stresses that the method is quite safe as medication is only  reduced as symptoms improve. ‘The breathing technique acts like  Ventolin, as a bronchodilator. You only take headache tablets if you  have a headache; if you don’t have a bronchospasm, why take a  bronchodilator?’
Five-year-old Ben Lord-Smith, who lives in Canberra, Australia, was  classed as a chronic asthmatic and put on an ever-increasing regimen of  preventative drugs after his first life-threatening attack at 18 months.  They failed to control the condition: he needed nebulisers day and  night and had repeated hospital stays.
Yet within 3 days of trying the Buteyko method, Ben was off  bronchodilators, and after seven months his GP was able to take him off  all asthma medication.
‘To have that threat of death taken away is wonderful’, says his  mother Sharon. ‘The drugs worried me – and why would you want to feed  children drugs if you’ve got some other way? Now, if he gets occasional  symptoms he does the Buteyko technique.’
It was anecdotal evidence like this that prompted the  Australian Asthma Foundation to fund the first controlled clinical trial  in Brisbane. The preliminary results, reported last month to the  Australian Thoracic Society, showed that after 6 weeks, patients using  the Buteyko method felt substantially better and had fewer symptoms and  had been able to reduce their reliever medication by 90 percent.
Although the treatment has aroused some controversy in Australia,  Jonathan Aitken said he was surprised. ‘There’s nothing subversive or  dangerous about it. It’s just a different breathing method. I dare say  it will ruffle the feathers of drug manufacturers and those very set in  their ways, but the acid test is: “Does it work or not?” Well, it did  for me.’