Main asthma treatments
There are two main treatments for asthma: preventers and relievers.
These come in a variety of delivery devices called inhalers, which
enable you to breathe the medicine in through your mouth, directly into
your lungs. The addition of a spacer device increases the medication
delivered to the lungs.
Asthma preventers
Preventers are designed to quell swelling and inflammation in the
airways and reduce mucus. This also reduces the sensitivity of the
airways and so minimises potential damage.
The protective effect
is built up gradually over a period of about a fortnight. Your
medication must be taken daily to maintain protection, even if you are
not experiencing symptoms.
Most preventers are based on
corticosteroids, usually known as steroids. These are completely
different from the anabolic steroids sometimes used by bodybuilders and
athletes.
Most common types of preventer are inhaled steroids.
These can include beclomethasone, budesonide, fluticasone. Occasionally,
if your asthma is acute and severe, you may be given a short course of
steroids taken as tablets, or even an injection.
There are other non-steroid preventers, usually used for children, such
as sodium cromoglycate and nedocromil sodium. They are usually taken
three to four times a day and are not generally as effective as
steroids.
Many people worry about the side-effects of steroids.
High doses taken over a long period can have significant side-effects.
For this reason, doctors will be careful to prescribe the lowest
possible dose needed to control your asthma.
Potential side effects of asthma preventers
The main side effects are hoarseness and an increased risk of mouth
and throat infections caused by thrush, a yeast that lives normally on
the body's mucous membranes.
Using the inhaler before brushing
your teeth and rinsing your mouth out afterwards helps to avoid this.
Using a 'spacer' makes it easier to inhale the drug, and so helps reduce
the risks of steroids being absorbed into your body.
Asthma relievers
Relievers are drugs that relax and open up the airways - medically
known as bronchodilators - making it easier to breath. These are
prescribed for the relief of asthma symptoms during an actual asthma
attack, when peak flow readings are low and before exercise or activity
to reduce the risk of an attack.
Because these drugs do not reduce swelling and inflammation of airways, you may also need to take a preventer.
Some
relievers alleviate symptoms almost instantly (rescue relievers).
Others have a longer lasting action (long-lasting relievers). The latter
may be prescribed if wheezing, breathing difficulties and coughing
persist despite using a preventer and a rescue reliever - or if symptoms
come on in the night - nocturnal asthma.
Common rescue relievers
are salbutamol and terbutaline. Another type of reliever (most often
prescribed for babies under two and for older people) is called
ipratropium bromide.
Long-acting relievers include oxitropium,
salmeterol, and eformoterol, all of which are inhaled. Occasionally,
theophylline-based drugs are taken by mouth, so tablets may be
prescribed.
Potential side effects of asthma relievers
Side effects are usually mild and pass away quickly. The main ones
are a slightly increased heartbeat, and muscle trembling, especially in
the hands. Some oral relievers may cause dry mouth, blurred vision,
difficulties passing urine, or constipation.
Theophylline-based drugs, which relax the muscles in the walls of the
airways, can occasionally cause nausea, more rapid heart rate, a
nettle-like rash, dizziness, nervousness, headaches, irritability or
restlessness.
Always report any unusual symptoms to your doctor.
Inhaled asthma medication
Most asthma treatments are inhaled. There are several different
types of inhalers, but the main ones are aerosol-based (often called
puffers) and dry powder inhalers.
- Puffers - the medication is mixed into a liquid and forced under pressure into a small aerosol canister. Once activated (usually by pushing down the canister, although breath activated devices are increasingly available) the liquid evaporates, leaving the active ingredient that you inhale. A measured dose of the drug is released every time the canister is pushed down. Both relievers and preventers can be given via a puffer.
- Dry powder inhalers - the drug that comes in dry powder form is contained in a capsule. When the device is activated, the capsule breaks and the powder may be inhaled. In some inhalers the powder is contained inside a disk or compartment.
- Spacers - because it can be hard to coordinate your breathing with an inhaler, you may be prescribed a spacer. This device allows more medication to enter your lungs than would be possible using an inhaler alone. It's usually a large plastic chamber in two halves, which click together, with a mouthpiece at one end and a hole at the other end where the inhaler is attached. The drug is released into the spacer chamber from the inhaler device, and then enters your body as you breathe in through the mouthpiece.
- Nebulisers - a machine in which air or oxygen is forced through the liquid form of a drug, creating a mist, which is then inhaled through a mask or mouthpiece. It's used to administer high doses of reliever in an emergency and sometimes for children who are too young to use an inhaler.
Other asthma medication
There are a number of medicines that are taken in pill form,
including eukotriene receptor antagonists, theophyllines and steroids .
Your doctor will be able to advise you when and why these may be
necessary for you.
If your asthma is really bad, your doctor may
also prescribe a short course of steroid tables to calm down your
inflamed airways.
New anti-inflammatory tablet-form medication for
asthma includes the leukotriene receptor antagonists. These are
particularly useful for brittle asthma and those with aspirin-sensitive
asthma.
Omalizumab is a new injection treatment for asthma that
works by dampening down the allergic reaction in those with severe
persistent allergic asthma.
Dealing with an asthma attack
- Remove yourself from any conditions or situations that trigger your asthma. Treatment is not as effective in the presence of a trigger.
- Take a couple of puffs of your reliever (usually the blue inhaler) , using a spacer if you have one. Stay calm and relaxed and breathe slowly to reduce fatigue.
- Rest sitting up. It's harder to breathe lying down. Loosen any tight clothing. Rest your hands on your knees to help support your back.
- If you have no immediate improvement, take another puff of your reliever inhaler every minute for 5 minutes or until symptoms improve.
- Wait five to ten minutes to see if the attack eases. Measure your peak flow to see if your reading is improving. If it does, you can resume what you were doing. If the reliever has not taken effect within 15 minutes, call your doctor or call an ambulance on 999. Carry on using the reliever every minute until help arrives.
Never put off seeking medical help because of fear of making a fuss or being a nuisance.
Hospital treatment for asthma
If you need hospital treatment, take your medication (and your
asthma management plan, if you have one) with you. The doctor will need
to know what steroids you have taken, whether you used a nebuliser and
if you are taking the drug theophylline.
On arrival, the doctor
will examine you and check your pulse, oxygen saturation blood pressure
and peak flow, and listen to your chest. You may also have a test to
check blood levels of oxygen and carbon dioxide.
Treatment will
usually begin with a nebuliser to improve your peak flow reading. If you
have to be admitted, a chest x-ray may be done to check for damage to
your lungs. On the ward, you'll probably have nebulised bronchodilator
treatment and steroid injections. Oxygen may be needed and, in severe
cases, artificial ventilation.
Helping someone having an asthma attack
If you're with someone who is having an asthma attack, try to stay
calm. Make sure they take their reliever medicine. Listen to them,
reassure them and encourage them to breathe slowly and deeply. If the
person has a peak flow meter use this to monitor their condition.
Don't
try to lie them down as this constricts the breathing passages. If the
reliever has no effect after five -ten minutes, or if the peak flow
meter falls to less than 50 per cent of the expected reading, you should
call a doctor or ambulance immediately. You should also do this if the
person becomes distressed or unable to speak properly.
Call for medical help immediately if the person's:
- Symptoms worsen even after taking medication.
- Peak flow number decreases or doesn't improve after treatment.
- Breathing becomes increasingly difficult and the chest and neck are depressed with each breath.
- Having difficulty walking or talking and has to stop what they're doing.
- Lips, tongue or fingernails take on a blue or grey tinge.
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