Asthma Flashcards
What part of the airways is affected and how?
Condition of the small airways
- Bronchioles: bronchoconstriction and bronchospasm
- Bronchi: mucus plugging and mucosal oedema
What are the ways that asthma can be induced?
- Exercise: triggered by physical exertion, possibly related to changes in air temperature or humidity
- Nocturnal: attacks occuring at night or early morning
- Irritant induced: occupational asthma such as smoke, fumes or gas
- Allergens: a hypersensitivity reaction occurs first and then subsequent exposures cause a asthma reaction
What causes bronchospasm/bronchoconstriction and mucosal oedema?
Contraction of bronchiolar smooth muscles caused by:
-inflammatory mediators such as histamine and leukotrienes
-controlled by cGMP, antagonised by cAMP - induced by Ach causing stimulation of parasymp. nerves
Mucosal oedema caused by vasodilation of airway vasculature and increased capillary permeability stimulated by inflammatory mediators
What causes mucus plugs?
- increased mucus production by goblet cells and submucosal glands stimulated by inflam. mediators
- epithelial cells shed from bronchial lining combine with mucus to form a plug
What chronic changes of asthma exacerbate airway obstruction?
Airway remodelling:
- thickening of bronchial basement membrane
- bronchial smooth muscle hypertrophy
- goblet cell hyperplasia
What signs and symptoms would you expect in an acute asthmatic reaction?
- Resp: dyspnoea, wheeze, low Sp02, non-productive cough, reduced peak expiratory flow, respiratory compromise (decreasing gas exchange, V/Q mm)
- CV: chest tightness, tachycardia, pulm. HT, decreased venous return
- Appearance: anxious, peripheral or central cyanosis
If an asthmatic patient deteriorates, what signs might follow and how are they caused?
- Dynamic hyperinflation: due to gas trapping
- Hypercapnia: gas trapping
- decreased resp effort: resp muscle fatigue
- Silent chest: reduced airflow
- Cardiac failure: reduced venous return (increased intrathoracic pressure from hyperinflation)
How would an acute asthmatic reaction be treated?
- Oxygen: to increase Sp02 and reduce hypoxia
- Salbutamol: B2 agonist induces SMC relaxation and bronchodilation
- Anticholinergic: reduce parasympathetic mediated constriction
- Adrenaline: bronchodilation, mast cell stabilisation
- Assisted ventilation: if decreased resp. effort