Winter and spring are the high incidence of asthma, but in the treatment of this disease, if you do not see many treatments correctly, then the control effect will be greatly reduced. Myth 1: Asthma can be cured. Asthma is an allergic disease, and the root cause of asthma is mainly the long-term non-specific inflammation in the bronchial tubes, which is not caused by bacterial or viral infections. If food allergies can be chosen not to be eaten, then respiratory allergies are difficult to control. Generally speaking, asthma is affected by large environments such as temperature differences, changes in air pressure, dust, etc., and small environments such as decorative materials, fumes, pet excrement, etc. are more influential. It is unrealistic to think that “short, flat and fast” treatment will never lead to a relapse. When patients first suffer from asthma, the condition is generally mild and can be controlled for a long time after taking correct preventive and control measures. On the contrary, if patients do not pay enough attention at the beginning, the more frequent the attacks will be, the more severe the symptoms will be and the more medication will be used. The treatment of asthma attacks is a short-term process, but the treatment of asthma is a long-term process. Once asthma is under control, inhalation therapy should be maintained for at least 3-6 months. Myth 2: Reluctance to use inhaled hormone therapy. Clinically, many patients are reluctant to use medication according to the doctor’s instruction, especially in the use of hormonal drugs there are two extremes. First, they refuse to use hormones, especially female and pediatric patients, who often think that hormone therapy will make them fat or affect their growth and development. The second is overuse of hormones, which has produced a series of side effects. In fact, hormones can be used properly to control asthma perfectly well. Neither the side effects of hormone therapy should be overemphasized, nor should the medication be used blindly. The correct asthma treatment should be inhaled glucocorticosteroids first, with inhaled long-acting beta agonists added according to the degree of the disease, and short-acting beta agonists inhaled only when there are acute symptoms. Inhaled hormones mainly work locally in the airways, with only a small amount absorbed into the bloodstream, and the applied dose is very small, generally less than 1 mg per day, so even if inhaled glucocorticosteroids are standardized for lifelong asthma treatment, no significant side effects will occur. Myth 3: Ignore the relationship between asthma and allergic rhinitis. Allergic rhinitis and asthma are the same persistent inflammatory disease in the same airway. About 80-90% of asthma patients have a combination of allergic rhinitis, and allergic rhinitis often leads to asthma. Therefore, if you have frequent cold symptoms, consider whether it is allergic rhinitis. Patients who are themselves allergic rhinitis should be more vigilant and should undergo active and effective intervention and treatment to prevent triggering or aggravating asthma.