
Originally Posted by
wheezing donkey
I was never bothered by asthma as a child and at grammar school I ran in the schools cross country team. Got back into running at 32 years of age and the first couple of years on the fells ( '83 & '84 ) produced results better than I had dared to hope for ( e.g. inside the top half of a championship field with 1 hour 31 mins at Coniston in '84 when Kenny Stuart set a record of 1.06 ). In '85 I continued to train just as hard but my running went into a slump. This continued through '86, until in August of that year I underwent a routine occupational health check - the company doctor was incredulous that I was a fell runner; with a peak flow rate of just 350 against the expected 600. He did confirm that I had a runner's steady heartbeat - nothing wrong there.
I was referred to my GP then the Royal Lancaster Infirmary for investigative tests. The conclusion was that I had contracted athletically induced asthma. I do use both purple inhalers (preventative, twice daily) and blue inhalers (as and when needed) but find that they do not make as much difference as maintaining a sustainable training regime. I also find that cycling appears to be more beneficial and more sustainable than running. After a month or so of regular, steady cycling, my uphill running is vastly improved to what it was before the cycling training.