Children who drink apple juice have many more opportunities to develop small asthma symptoms, said the scientists.

Research by the National Heart and Lung Institute, published in a scientific publication of the European Respiratory Journal, is the latest research linking apples and lungs health.

Chance of children who drank apple juice fruit at least once experienced shortness of breath 50 percent smaller than those drinking less than once in a month, so the research findings.

Eating fresh apples do not show a clear benefit, plus the results of that research.
This research looks at children aged five to 10 years in the area of Greenwich, London. The researchers asked the parents concerning their consumption of fruits of their children and symptoms of the disease that they idap.

Although there is no linkage between apple juice consumption and the decreasing likelihood that actual asthma diagnosis, the relationship between shortness of breath and drink juice is very strong.

The emergence of symptoms of shortness of breath is one important sign that the child has asthma risk, despite many children who show symptoms that ultimately do not terdiagnosis with the respiratory disease. Benefits that are similar, but weaker found in children who eat a banana at least once a day compared with less than one time in one month.

Dr Mike Thomas, an asthma researcher at the University of Aberdeen, UK, said the research is another proof of the impact protektif apple fruit.

"There is evidence that healthy food that is rich with antioxidants and vitamins good for asthma.