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Tuesday, November 24, 2009
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Are you an asthma suffer?  Manage your asthma or COPD with great ideas from people like you.Start here.

Treatment

(Page 2)

General Guidelines for Treating and Managing Asthma on an On-Going Basis

Avoiding allergens, following appropriate drug treatments, and home monitoring are key elements in preventing dangerous asthma attacks and hospitalization. In addition, good communication between the doctor and patient is a key factor in a successful management program.

Understanding the Difference Between Treating Symptoms and Controlling the Disease

Medications for asthma fall into two categories:

  • Rescue Medications. Medications that open the airways (bronchodilators, or inhalers) are used to quickly relieve any moderate or severe asthma attack. These drugs are usually short-acting beta-adrenergic agonists (beta2-agonists). Other drugs used in special cases include  corticosteroids taken by mouth and anticholinergic drugs. None of these drugs have any effect on the disease process itself. They are only useful for treating symptoms.
  • Maintenance Medications. Simply coping with asthma symptoms without also controlling the damaging inflammatory response is a common and serious error. For adults and children over age 5 with moderate-to-severe persistent asthma, experts now recommend inhaled corticosteroids and long-acting beta2-agonists.

Parents can greatly reduce the frequency and severity of their children’s asthma attacks by understanding the difference between coping with asthma attacks and controlling the disease over time. Unfortunately, many patients do not understand the difference between medications that provide rapid, short-term relief and those that are used for long-term symptom control. Many patients with moderate or severe asthma overuse their short-term medications and underuse their corticosteroid medications. The overuse of bronchodilators can have serious consequences; not using steroids can lead to permanent lung damage.

Patients need to understand that asthma symptoms can change quickly over time and that treatment strategies may need to change in response. In 2005, the two leading U.S. allergy associations published joint guidelines on controlling asthma. The guidelines emphasize that asthma treatment decisions need to be made on an individual basis. It is important that patients have a close relationship with their doctor. The doctor needs to evaluate a patient’s asthma symptoms at each visit to determine any need for changes in medication. According to the guidelines, asthma management is classified as either “well-controlled” or “not well-controlled”. The doctor may need to change some medications, or increase or decrease the dosage, depending on whether a child’s asthma is well-controlled or not well-controlled.


Review Date: 03/18/2006
Reviewed By: Harvey Simon, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Physician, Massachusetts General Hospital.

A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org).
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