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Acute severe asthma. Acute severe asthma : who is at most risk ?. Previous life-threatening attacks Severe disease (3 or >3 drugs for control; emergency steroid in past ; ever admitted in last 1 year) Psychiatric morbidity Non-compliance Requiring 2 or > 2 Bronchodilator inhalers monthly.
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Acute severe asthma :who is at most risk ? • Previous life-threatening attacks • Severe disease (3 or >3 drugs for control; emergency steroid in past ; ever admitted in last 1 year) • Psychiatric morbidity • Non-compliance • Requiring 2 or > 2 Bronchodilator inhalers monthly
Near fatal episodes • Misuse of drugs/alcohol • Psychiatric illness • Denial • Non compliance • Learning difficulties • Previous admission to ICU for asthma • Brittle asthma • Social isolation, income and employment difficulties • Previous self discharge from hospital Br Med J 2005;330585-9
What is acute severe asthma ? ANYONE OF: • PEF 33-50% best or predicted • RR 25/min • Heart rate 110/min • Inability to complete sentences in one breath
What is life threatening asthma ? ANYONE OF: • PEF < 33% best or predicted • Sat O2 <92% • PaO2< 55 mm Hg • Normal PaCO2 • Silent chest • Cyanosis • Feeble respiratory effort • Heart rate 110/min • Inability to complete sentences in one breath
Contd……. • Bradycardia • Dysrhythmia • Hypotension • Exhaustion • Confusion • Coma
What is near fatal asthma? • Increased PaCO2 • Requiring mechanical ventilation
What is brittle asthma? • Type 1… > 40% diurnal variability in PEF for > 50% of the time over a period > 150 days despite intense therapy • Type 2 … sudden severe attacks on a background of apparently well controlled asthma
Criteria for hospital admission • Near fatal attack ADMIT IN ICU • Life threatening attack ADMIT IN ICU • Severe attack persisting after initial treatment • Previous near fatal or brittle attack • Concerns about compliance • Living alone • Psychological problems • Physical disability / learning difficulty • Pregnancy • Presentation at night
Hospital Treatment – Immediate action • CBC (to r/o infection) • Chest X-ray (to r/o pneumothorax) • Oxygen (40-60%) • β2 agonist –nebulised or MDI + spacer • Inhaled Ipratropium can be added if required • Systemic steroid (Prednisolone / Hydrocortisone) • Inhaled steroids to be continued or started as soon as posible • Avoid sedation
Nebulised salbutamol 5 mg or 0.15 - 0.3 mg/kg salbutamol hourly (to a maximum of 10 mg per hour have been used in trials so far) Nebulised Ipratropium bromide 250-500 mcg 6 hourly
Acute severe asthma…continues • Oxygen continues • Nebulised ß2-agonist(5 mg salbutamol every 20 minutes or continuously at 5-10mg/hr) • Nebulised ipratropium bromide(500 mcg 4-6 hrly ) • Combination of above two
Acute severe Asthma Treatment (Contd.) • Obtain IV access • Start steroids (4 mg/kg hydrocortisone loading dose, then 100 mg 6 hrly) • Antibiotics ( not routinely ) • Adequate hydration • Still deteriorating - Start Aminophylline infusion (0.5 - 0.7 mg/kg/hr)
Acute severe Asthma Treatment (Contd.) • Adrenaline (0.1 mg sc) • Cautious CPAP (ideally BiPAP) • Mechanical ventilation • 6 - 10 RR • Low TV (6 - 10 ml / kg) • I:E ratio 1:3 or longer • Maintain PaO2 > 60 mmHg • Allow PaCO2 to rise, provided pH > 7.2 • Adequate sedation and paralysis
Management of acute severe Asthma in children > 2 years • High O2 concentrations • β2 agonist –nebulised or MDI + spacer • Systemic steroids ( Oral / IV ) • IV Bronchodilators ( Salbutamol 15μg/kg bolus or continuous infusion of 1-2μg/kg/min upto 5μg/kg/minin PICU)
Treatment (general practice) • Oxygen (Check Room air O2 saturation if available) • Nebulised salbutamol 5 mg • Prednisolone (30-60 mg) orIV Hydrocortisone 200 mg • Nebulised Ipratropium Bromide (500 mcg) • SC Terbutaline / IV Aminophylline (5mg/kg bolus over 20 mins.) • Arrange for ambulance
Emergency Department Management Acute Asthma Initial AssessmentHistory, Physical Examination, PEF or FEV1 Initial TherapyBronchodilators , O2 if needed GoodResponse Incomplete/Poor Response Respiratory Failure Add Systemic Glucocorticosteroids Observe for atleast 1 hour Good Response Poor Response If Stable,Discharge toHome Discharge Admit to Hospital Admit to ICU
Instructions / points on discharge • Been on discharge medication for 24 hours • Inhaler technique checked • PEFR diurnal variability < 25% • Oral + inhaled steroids / bronchodilators • ? PEFR meter • Follow-up appointment < 48 hrs with GP
‘Treat acute severe asthma at least 4 days before it occurs’ Thomas Petty
PREVENT ACUTE ATTACKS OF ASTHMA BY TAKING REGULAR INHALED CORTICOSTEROID TREATMENT