Lecture 59 – Respiratory Therapeutics Flashcards
Factors that influence asthma development
o Host factors
Genetic
Gender obesity
o Environmental factors
Indoor allergens
Outdoor allergens
Chemical irritants
Tobacco smoke
Air pollution
Respiratory infections
Predominant characteristic of allergic (Th2-type) asthma
o Airway obstruction
o Increased airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR)
o Chronic eosinophilic airway inflammation
Airway obstruction
o Mucous hypersecretion
o Occlusion of airway lumen
o Airway mucosal oedema
o Bronchial blood vessels leaky and dilated
o Swelling – encroachment on lumen
FEV
o Forced expiratory volume
Inflammation: cells and mediators
o Inflammatory cells e.g. mast cells
o Structural cells e.g. epithelial cells
o Mediators e.g. histamine
o Effects e.g. bronchospasm
Key components of allergic (Th2 type) asthma pathogenesis
o Induction phase
o Smooth muscle shortening (bronchoconstriction
o Inflammation
Strategies to target asthma
o Prevent development of allergy (difficult)
o Prevent or reverse the airway obstruction
o Prevent or reverse airway inflammation
Drug delivery to the lungs
o From asthma pump
o 10-20% inhaled
o 80-90% swallowed
Airway smooth muscles (ASM)
o Airway smooth muscle tone – balance of relaxation and constriction
o Bronchodilator response = relaxation of ASM
o Bronchoconstrictor response = contraction of ASM
Short-acting Beta2 adrenoceptor agonists (SABA; reliever)
o Acute symptom relief of exercise-induced bronchoconstriction
o Must be used with inhaled corticosteroid
o Increased use needs to review – poorly controlled
o Frequent use associated with poor outcomes
o Rapid (2-5 mins) onset of action
o Duration 2-4 hours (diffusion not metabolism)
o E.g. salbutamol, terbutaline
Long-acting beta2-adrenoceptor agonists (LABAs; preventer)
o Prophylaxis
o Reduce number of flare-ups
o Always combined with ICS in single actuator
o Benefit of chronic bronchodilatation
o E.g. salmeterol (slow onset, 12h duration), formoterol (rapid onset, 12h duration)
Beta2-andrenoceptor agonist adverse effects and precautions
o Adverse effects = selectivity for the B2-adrenceptor is very important
o Precautions = cardiovascular disorders, diabetes (high doses), sympathomimetic amines
Glucocorticoids (preventer)
o Main preventative treatment – regular daily treatment
o Decreases symptoms, flare-ups, risk of hospitalisation and death
o ICS = inhaled corticosteroid e.g. budesonide
o Systemic (oral, tablet or liquid) = serve asthma or acute flare-up e.g. prednisolone
Adverse effects of inhaled glucocorticoids
o Well tolerated
o Hoarseness and weakness of voice
o Oral thrush
o Mouthwash reduced local absorption
Systemic (oral) adverse effects of glucocorticoids
o Suppression of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
o Mood changes
o Weight gain
o Diabetes
o Osteoporosis