Asthma Flashcards
Define asthma
Chronic inflammatory airway disease characterised by intermittent reversible airway obstruction, bronchial hyperresponsiveness and inflammation
What are the causes/risk factors of asthma?
Acute • SM contraction -> bronchoconstriction • Mucus hypersecretion • Oedema • Airway obstruction
Chronic
• Proliferation of SM cells and fibroblasts -> airway remodelling
• Family history
• Atopy – eczema, atopic dermatitis, allergic rhinitis
Allergens/precipitants • House dust mite • Pollen • Pets • Cigarette smoke • Aspergillus spores • Drugs e.g. beta-blockers, NSAIDs • Cold • Exercise • Emotion • Viral respiratory tract infection • Occupational (isocyanates, epoxy resins)
Describe the epidemiology of asthma
Affects 10% of children and 5% of adults
Prevalence is increasing
What are the presenting symptoms of asthma?
- Dyspnoea
- Cough
- Wheeze
- Chest tightness
- Nocturnal symptoms
- Worse in the morning
What are the signs of asthma?
- Nasal polyps/congestion
- Polyphonic high-pitched expiratory wheeze
- Tachypnoea
- Prolonged expiratory phase
- Hyperinflated chest
- Chest may be silent is severe asthma
What are the investigations for asthma?
Acute attack/exacerbation
• Peak flow - mild = >80%; moderate = 60% to 80%; severe = <60%
• Pulse oximetry - mild = >95%; moderate = 91% to 95%; severe = <90%
• Bloods
- FBC - ↑WCC in infective exacerbations
- U&Es
- CRP
• ABG - PaCO2 of <45 mmHg (6.0 kPa) in mild and moderate exacerbations and >45 mmHg in severe exacerbations.
• CXR – may show hyperinflation
Chronic • Bloods - Eosinophilia - IgE level - Aspergillus antibody titres • PEFR monitoring – diurnal variation • Lung function tests – FEV1/FVC ratio <80%, obstructive picture, improvement with beta-2 agonists • Skin prick test/immunoassay – identify allergens
- diagnosis:
PEFR varies >20% over 3 days a week over several weeks
PEFR increases by >20% in response to bronchodilator therapy
Describe the management of asthma
Acute attack/exacerbation
• High flow O2 (aim for 94-98% O2 sats)
• Nebulised salbutamol
• 100-200mg hydrocortisone IV -> 40mg oral prednisolone for 5-7 days
- Nebulised ipratropium 0.5mg every 4-6h
- IV magnesium sulphate infusion
- IV aminophylline infusion
- ITU and ventilation
• Monitor O2 saturation, ABG, PEFR, U&Es (↓K)
• Treat the underlying cause! – infection, pneumothorax
*Discharge • PEFR >75% • Check inhaler technique • Stable on discharge meds • Arrange follow-up
Chronic
1) SABA
2) + ICS
3) + LABA +/- ↑ ICS
4) + ↑↑ ICS or LRA or theophylline
5) + oral steroids
What are the complications of asthma?
- Airway remodelling
- Growth retardation
- Chest wall deformity – Harrison’s sulcus
- Acute exacerbations
- Recurrent infections
- Pneumothorax
- Respiratory failure
- Death
Describe the prognosis of asthma
Most children improve as they get older
Adult-onset asthma tends to be chronic