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Medical management of Acute Severe Asthma & COPD Acute Exacerbation. vivek. Case 1: Elderly gentleman in casualty.
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Medical management of Acute Severe Asthma &COPD Acute Exacerbation vivek
Case 1:Elderly gentleman in casualty • 68 year old retired school teacher, known case of CAD (old AWMI) and COPD is brought to the casualty with c/o increased cough and sputum production since morning. He was supervising some maintenance work at home a few days back. On examination • Afebrile • PR 128/min, BP 134/76mm, RR 40/min • Chest B/L breath sounds equal, scattered wheeze • SaO2 90% (room air)
Is this COPD exacerbation? • Yes • Exacerbation is a worsening of dyspnoea, cough or sputum production that exceeds day to day variability and persists for more than a day or two. • Anything more than usual symptoms
COPD exacerbations • Exacerbations are important clinical events in COPD • 2.74 million death worldwide.
What is the precipitating event in this case? • Bacterial infection • Viral infection • Exposure to respiratory irritants/ air pollution • Co-morbid conditions
In the ER.. • Patient received 2L/min oxygen, nebulized bronchodilator and IV steroids • Partial relief • Basic labs sent • Chest X-ray requested
Should we admit him? • Yes • Management depends upon severity • Home care Vs Hospital care • Bronchodilators increase dose and frequency • Steroid Prednisolone 30-60mg for 1-2 weeks • ?Antibiotics
Indications of hospitalization → • Sudden onset of severe symptoms • Unusual symptoms • Diagnostic uncertainty (Pneumonia, PE, Cancer) • New signs (oedema, cyanosis, drowsiness) • Inability to eat/sleep • Underlying severe COPD • Co-morbidities (DM, cardiac/renal/hepatic failure) • Failure to respond to initial treatment • Older age • Inadequate home/social support • Poor adherence to treatment → → → →
Investigations • Chest X-Ray • ABG • Sputum culture • ECG ± Echo
Inpatient management • Bronchodilators • Steroid • ?Antibiotics • Oxygen Oral or IV route of antibiotics and steroids? How much oxygen can be given? Which antibiotic is better?
Oxygen • Required in all hypoxemic patients • Don’t withhold low flow oxygen for fear of worsening CO2 retention • Monitor SaO2
Bronchodilator therapy • Inhaled beta-2 agonists (salbutamol, levo-salbutamol) and ipatropium either alone or in combination • Role of tiotropium in acute setting not established at present • Delivery by nebulizer or MDI + spacer device is equally effective
Suggested antibiotic Balter MS, La Forge J, Low DE et al: Can Respir J 10:3B-32B;2003
Steroids • Short term use • Oral and IV steroids are equally effective • Prednisolone 30-60mg/day • IV Methyl Prednisolone 40-125mg Q 6h (OR) IV Hydrocortisone 100mg Q 6h
Complications • Pneumonia • Pneumothorax • Corpulmonale • Arrhythmias
What advice can we give to prevent future exacerbations? • Vaccination • Health education • Inhalation technique
When to discharge? • Clinically stable for 24 hours • Patient able to eat, walk and sleep • Nebulized bronchodilators ≤ 4 hours • ABG stable for 24 hours
Case 2:Young advocate • 28 year old chronic wheezer on irregular treatment was brought to the casualty with c/o cough and wheezing since 1 week. Soon after appearing for a case in the morning, he developed severe dyspnoea and collapsed in his office. On examination • Cyanosed • PR 132/min, BP 130/76mm, RR 34/min • Chest B/L extensive wheeze • SaO2 88% (room air)
In the ER.. • Patient received 5L/min oxygen, nebulized bronchodilator and IV steroids • No relief • PR 67/min • BP 100/60mm • Chest- ↓ wheeze
Is this acute severe asthma? • Yes • A severe exacerbation that fails to improve rapidly with intensive bronchodilator therapy.
‘Danger signals’ • Feeble respiratory movement Silent chest Cyanosis • Bradycardia Hypotension • Confusion Coma Convulsion
In the ER.. • Patient received 5L/min oxygen, nebulized bronchodilator and IV steroids • No relief • PR 67/min • BP 100/60mm • Chest- ↓ wheeze → →
Good practice point • Patients with near fatal asthma attacks may not be distressed and may not have all these abnormalities. • The presence of any should alert the doctor.
Near fatal asthma • Near fatal asthma is defined as • Raised PaCO2 and / or • Requiring mechanical ventilation due to severe asthmatic attack.
Near fatal asthma • In- hospital mortality is high. • Poor long term prognosis. • Consumes health care resources
Who is at risk? Non compliance Psychosis, depression, others Drugs, alcohol, tranquillizers Stress (domestic, marital, legal, job related) → Past h/o NFA Past h/o hospitalization Repeated ER visits Heavy use of β2 agonists Brittle asthma → → →
Medical management • Oxygen • Bronchodilators • Steroids • Aminophylline • Magnesium
Long term prognosis A 6 year follow-up study of 145 patients who underwent mechanical ventilation for near fatal attack of asthma. Marquette CH, Sauliner F, Leory O, WallaertB,Chopin C, Demarcq CM, Durocher A,Tonnel AB.
What is the prognosis? • In hospital mortality 16.1 % • Post hospitalization mortality After 1 year 10.1 % After 3 years 14.4 % After 6 years 22.6 % Pulmonary function test 58.5 % PFR recording 16 %