Asthma Flashcards

1
Q

Which clinical feature must be present for the diagnosis of asthma?

A

Wheeze.

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2
Q

In which gender groups in asthma most common?

A

Boys and women.

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3
Q

Which ‘hits’ can contribute to asthma?

A

Genes, inherently abnormal lungs, early onset atopy and later exposures such as viruses, exercise and smoking.

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4
Q

What are the common symptoms of asthma?

A

Wheeze, SOB at rest. sooking in of ribs with wheeze, cough (dry, just after falling asleep, exertional).

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5
Q

What are common features in the history of an asthma patient?

A

URTI, FH, eczema, hayfever and food alllergies.

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6
Q

What is the main treatment for asthma?

A

ICS for 2 months.

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7
Q

What are the differential diagnoses?

A

VIW - give salbutamol to differentiate.

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8
Q

What are the 3 proven risk factors for asthma?

A

Genetic risk factors, occupational risk factors and smoking.

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9
Q

Describe genetic risk factors for asthma.

A

Atopy - genetic tendency to develop a disease. Increased IgE response to allergens, food allergies, hay fever and eczema. Strongest risk factor is a family history of atopic disease. 2 groups of genetic associations: il4, il5 and Ige, and airway genes (ADAM33).

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10
Q

Describe occupational risk factors for asthma.

A

10-15% adult onset asthma caused by these.

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11
Q

How does smoking increase chances of asthma?

A

Maternal smoking during pregnancy: lower FEV1, higher wheezy illness, airway responsiveness and change of high asthma severity. Grandmother effect: smoking causes epigenetic changes in the foetus so there is a higher chance of asthma in the child.

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12
Q

What other things can cause wheeze other than asthma?

A

Localised airway obstruction, inspiratory stridor, tumour or foreign body.

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13
Q

Which 5 diseases can cause generalised airflow obstruction?

A

Asthma, COPD, bronchiectasis, bronchiolitis and CF. Asthma is reversible, COPD is not.

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14
Q

What affects do B-blockers have on asthma?

A

Make it worse.

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15
Q

What will the FEV1:FVC be in an asthma patient?

A

Can be normal as asthma symptoms are reversible when given B2-agonists or steroids. If there is an obstruction this will be less than 70% predicted.

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16
Q

What separates COPD from asthma?

A

Reversibility of symptoms when given oral corticosteroids.

17
Q

How is spirometry used in asthma testing?

A

If obstructed, full pulomnary function tests then test reversibility with B2 agonists then steroids. Normal, peak flow monitoring and bronchial provocation test/NO.

18
Q

Name the essential investigations for asthma.

A

Looking for evidence of AFO and its reversibility.: spirometry, lung volumes (gas trapping), CO gas transfer, response to bronchodilator (salbutamol), response to ICS (anti-inflammatory), peak flow for 2 weeks (if spirometry normal).

19
Q

How is acute, severe asthma assessed?

A

Ability to speak, HR, RR, PEF, O2 saturation and arterial blood gases.

20
Q

What is a symptom of near fatal asthma?

A

Raised PaCO2.

21
Q

What are the goals of asthma treatment?

A

Minimal symptoms during day/night; minimal need for medication; no exacerbations; no limitation of physical activity; and normal lung function (FEV1 or PEF > 80% predicted or best).

22
Q

How is asthma control measured?

A

SANE

SABA/week, Absence school/nursery, Nocturnal symptoms/week and Exertional symptoms/week.

23
Q

What are the classes of asthma medications?

A

SABA, ICS, LABA, Leukotriene receptor antagonists, Theophyllines and oral steroids.

24
Q

Describe the stepwise approach to asthma treatment in CHILDREN.

A

1) Start with inhaled SABA (spacer/DPI) and monitor. 2) If using SABA/waking up > 3 x/week start on low dose ICS or LABA if under 5. 3) Complicated. Add LABA or > dose of ICS. 4) Under 5’s refer for confirmation of diagnosis, over 5’s increase to > dose ICS. 5) Refer! 6) Psychological/compliance issues - question diagnosis.

25
Q

What does a leukotriene receptor antagonist (LTRA) do?

A

Blocks inflammation of airways - most effective in those who are highly allergic. Non-steroidal. Montelukast is the only one.

26
Q

What is the advantage of using a spacer?

A
27
Q

What is the advantage of using a DPI (dry powder inhaler)?

A

Achieves 20% lung deposition. Quicker, quieter and cheaper than nebuliser.

28
Q

What are the advantages of inhalers?

A

Small dose of drugs, delivered directly to target organ, onset of effect faster, minimal systemic exposure, systemic adverse effects are less severe/frequent, inhaled drug therapy is painless and relatively comfortable.

29
Q

What is a MDI?

A

Metered dose inhaler. However, needs co-ordination and so elderly/children/unwell cannot use effectively. Better when used with a spacer. With DPI patients control inhalations.

30
Q

Describe the stepwise approach to asthma treatment in ADULTS.

A

1) SABA as required (mild intermittent asthma), salbutamol or terbutaline, adverse effects rare with inhaled and common with oral formulations. 2) Add ICS (regular preventer therapy), end in ‘sone’, oral have many side effects. 3) Add LABA or > ICS to 800 mcg, eg. symbicort. 4) > ICS up to 2000 mcg or add LTRA/therphylline/B2 agonist tablet (persistent poor control). 5) Frequent use of oral steroids.

31
Q

Describe the effects of theophylline.

A

Weak bronchodilator but has many side effects. Narrow therapeutic window and unpredictable metabolism (interacts with many drugs).

32
Q

What is omalizumab?

A

An anti-IgE mAb for IgE-mediated severe allergic asthma.

33
Q

How is acute mild/moderate asthma treated?

A

Oral predisolone for 7 days; SABA every 2 hours; assess within 24 hours. Immediate medical help if deteriorating.

34
Q

How is acute severe asthma treated?

A

Admission to hospital; oral/IV steriods; nebulused bronchodilators (salbutamol/ipratropium); O2 (target SaO2 94-98%); consider IV MgSo4 (Mg sulphate); antibiotics of pneumonia/bacterial infection; CXR and ABG.