The most likely case is when you are struggling to breath you are wearing out your vocal cords.
Another case could be that the Asthma attack was induced from acid reflux or heart burn, which is common, and the acid can affect your vocal cords that way.
No, it doesn't. Only when you're having an attack (or if you're just having trouble breathing) you have less air to talk and your voice goes quieter.
It depends. If you are going through puberty and your voice breaks, it will come back, but it will come back lower than it was. If you are not going through puberty, when you lose your voice, it will only be lower temporarily.
To my knowledge, and after a quick browse through various medical pages and forums, I do not think Asthma will affect the body temperature (seldom, having an asthma attack might lower or raise your temperature as your body goes into "shock mode".) However, if anything, body temperature, I.E: lowering of the body temperature when sleeping or heightening of the temperature when exercising can be a trigger to asthma; but not the other way around.
David the Voice Stein goes by Voice, and David Voice.
Not all verbs can be used in passive voice. Only verbs that take an object can. Therefor "He goes to school" has no passive form.
You can't lose your voice unless it damages.
In some cases childhood asthma goes into a remission, often for long periods of time. However it does tend to re-emerge in later life.
your gay
My vote goes to Eva Cassidy.
It is not switched on.
First, Comforters are filled with down feathers. Second, Duvet is a cover that goes over the down comforter. And third, it's asthma. You can always get hypo-allergenic comforters instead of down. But it shouldn't matter. Down doesn't affect asthma.
high pitched voice is when your voice goes high and the noise is like kind of squashed kind of noise and not really loud