Asthma: Presentation By: Dr. Zunaira Nawaz Dr. Nida Shafique
Asthma: Presentation By: Dr. Zunaira Nawaz Dr. Nida Shafique
Asthma: Presentation By: Dr. Zunaira Nawaz Dr. Nida Shafique
Definition
Etiology and Pathophysiology
Clinical Features
Diagnosis
Management of Chronic Stable Asthma
Management of Asthma Exacerbation
Important Drugs
Counselling
Discharge Criteria of Patients
Definition
Wheeze
Cough
Chest tightness
Dyspnea
In asthma these symptoms tend to be
intermittent, worse at night and provoked by
triggers.
Differential Diagnosis of Wheeze
f
Precipitating factors
Viral infections
Cold air
Exercise
Emotion
Irritant dusts
Vapours and fumes( cigarette smoke, perfume, exhaust fumes)
Drugs : NSAIDS, aspirin, B- blockers
Common Occupations
associated with Asthma
Veterinary medicine and animal handling
(allergens are mouse, rat and rabbit urine and
fur)
Bakery (wheat, rye)
Laundry work ( biological enzymes)
Associated diseases
Acid reflux
Polyarteritis nodosa
Churg-strauss syndrome
ABPA
Diagnosis of asthma
Source: “What You and Your Family Can Do About Asthma” by the Global Initiative
For Asthma Created and funded by NIH/NHLBI, 1995
Reducing Exposure to
Environmental Tobacco Smoke
Evidence suggests an
association between
environmental tobacco smoke
exposure and exacerbations of
asthma among school-aged,
older children, and adults.
Air pollution
Trees, grass, and weed pollen
The goals of asthma management
Use of short-acting
Severity in patients ≥ 12 %FEV1 of beta2 agonist for symptom
Symptom frequency Nighttime symptoms FEV1Variability
years of age [9] predicted control (not for prevention of
EIB)
Intermittent ≤2 per week ≤2 per month ≥80% <20% ≤2 days per week
Frequent (often
Severe persistent Throughout the day <60% >30% Several times per day
7x/week)
Start treatment at any step considering the severity of disease.
STEP 1: mild intermittent asthma
Inhaled short acting B2 agonist(salbutamol) as required.
Mode of action: relax bronchial smooth muscles(by increasing cAMP) within
mins.
STEP 2: Regular preventive therapy(mild persistent)
Add inhaled steroid: beclometasone dipropionate or budesonide at 100-400 mcg
twice a day.. OR
Fluticasone at 50-200 mcg twice a day.
Mode of action: anti-inflammatory: red phospholipase A2 activity and expression
of COX2, therefore reducing leukotrienes( extremely potent
bronchoconstrictor) and inflammation.
STEP 3: Add on therapy(moderate persistent)
This is considered beyond an ICS dose of 800 mcg/day.
First choice add-on therapy: long acting B2 agonist(LABA) :
salmeterol 50mcg/ 12h or formoterol 12mcg/ 12h
Duration of action of atleast 12hrs.
Others that can be considered: leukotriene receptor
antagonist( montelukast 10mg PO daily)
OR
Theophylline: phosphodiesterase inhibitor, therefore
increasing cAMP n utimately leading to brochodilation.
STEP 4: Persistent poor control (severe
persistent)
Increase inhaled steroid to 2000 mcg/day and/or
Addition of a fourth drug: oral therapy with
LTRA: montelukast 10mg PO daily or
Sustained release theophylline or
Slow release B2 agonist
STEP 5 : Oral steroids (prednisolone)
Continuous or frequent use at the lowest dose
possible.
Oral steroids are used acutely as high dose, short
courses, eg prednisolone 40mg/24hr for 7 days
and longer term in lower doses eg 5-10 mg/24hr.
If control is not achieved at any step, consider step
up but first review medication technique,
adherence and environmental control.
Consider step down if good symptom control for 3
or more months.
How to Use a Spray Inhaler
The health-care
provider should
evaluate inhaler
technique at each
visit.
Source: “What You and Your Family Can Do About Asthma” by the Global Initiative for
Asthma Created and funded by NIH/NHLBI
ACUTE SEVERE ASTHMA
SEVERE ATTACK:
Inability to complete a sentence in one breath
Respiratory rate of > or equal to 25 breaths /min
Tachycardia > or equal to 110 beats/min
PEFR <50% predicted or patient’s best
Life threatening attack
silent chest, cyanosis or feeble respiratory effort
Exhaustion, confusion or coma
Bradycardia or hypotension
PEFR< 30% of predicted or best
Blood gas markers of a life threatening attack are
PaO2 <60 mmHg or SpO2 < 92% despite treatment
with oxygen
INVESTIGATIONS:
PEF
ABGs
CXR
CBC
UCE
Management of acute severe
asthma
Start treatment immediately prior to investigation.
Sit the patient up and give 40-60% of oxygen to
achieve oxygen saturation of atleast 92%
Salbutamol 5mg or terbutaline 10mg via O2 driven
nebulizer.
Hydrocortisone 100mg IV or 60mg orally
No sedatives of any kind.
Antibiotics if definite evidence of infection
Monitor in all patients:
Arterial oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry
Arterial blood gaeses only if PaO2 <92% or life
threatening features
PEFR 30mins after starting treatment, and then before
and after B2 agonist treatment
Consider repeat blood gases 2hrs after starting treatment
Fluid intake, aim for 2.5- 3L /day, IV if necessary
U & E daily
If improved-continue
60% O2
Prednisolone tablets- reduce from 60mg to 30mg
daily for atleast 5days until recovery
Nebulized B2 agonist 4hrly
After 24hrs, consider
Adding in high dose inhaled corticosteroid
Change nebulized to inhaled B2 agonist
Discharge from hospital
When PEFR >75% predicted or best with diurnal
variability <25%
Been on discharge medication for 24hrs
Had inhaler technique checked
Own a peak expiratory flow meter and have
management plan
Determine reason for exacerbation
Life threatening features present or poor response to
treatment
60% O2
Hydrocortisone 100mg 6hrly IV
Repeat nebulized B2 agonist every 15-30mins
Continuous nebulization at 5-10mg/hr
Add nebulized ipratropium bromide 500mcg 4-6hrly
Add single dose Magnesium sulphate 1.2-2gm over
20mis by IV infusion
Consider intravenous:
Salbutamol: 5mg in 500ml N/S or 5% dextrose( i.e.
10mg/ml). Give loading dose of 250mcg (25ml) over
10mins and continue at 10-30 mcgs /min( 1-3ml/min)
Aminophylline: loading dose of 5mg/kg over 20mins
and continue at 0.5mg/kg/hr. Monitor blood
concentrations daily if continued for 24hrs,
therapeutic range 10-20mg/l.
If poor response within 1hr transfer to ITU for
possible intubation and mechanical ventilation.
Once patient is improving
Wean down and stop aminophylline over 12-24hrs
Reduce nebulized salbutamol and switch to inhaled
Bagonist
Initiate inhaled steroids and stop oral steroids if possible
Continue to monitor PEF.
Look for deterioration on reduced treatment and beware
early morning dips in PEF
Look for the cause of acute exacerbation and admission.