When standard inhalers are not enough.
If you depend on rescue medication, take repeated oral steroids, or visit the ER for asthma — you may benefit from advanced Type 2 inflammation evaluation.
Using your rescue inhaler every day is NOT normal.
What is severe asthma?
Severe asthma is asthma that remains uncontrolled despite high-dose inhaled steroids and a long-acting bronchodilator, or that requires repeated courses of oral corticosteroids. It is often driven by Type 2 inflammation.
Warning signs of undertreatment
Talk with a specialist if you experience any of the following:
- Rescue inhaler ≥2 times per week
- ≥2 oral steroid courses in the last 12 months
- Any ER visit or hospitalization for asthma
- Nocturnal symptoms or activity limitation
- Coexisting nasal polyps, eczema or eosinophilia
How we evaluate
Our online evaluation reviews your full history, current spirometry, biomarkers (eosinophils, IgE, FeNO when available), comorbidities, and treatment history. We then orient you on advanced options including biologic therapy candidacy.
Severe asthma rarely travels alone.
Type 2 inflammation underlying severe asthma frequently overlaps with sinonasal, skin, allergic and eosinophilic disease. Recognizing the full inflammatory phenotype guides phenotype-driven, precision therapy.
