Medical Intervention
Prevention and long-term control is the key to preventing asthma attacks. Treatment usually involves learning to recognize your triggers and taking steps to avoid them, and tracking your breathing to make sure your daily asthma medications are keeping symptoms under control. In case of an asthma flare-up, you may need to use a quick-relief inhaler such as albuterol.
Medications
The right medications for you depend on a number of things, including your age, your symptoms, your asthma triggers and what seems to work best to keep your asthma under control.
The right medications for you depend on a number of things, including your age, your symptoms, your asthma triggers and what seems to work best to keep your asthma under control.
Long-term control
medications
In most cases, these medications need to be taken every day. Types of long-term control medications include:
In most cases, these medications need to be taken every day. Types of long-term control medications include:
- Inhaled corticosteroids. These medications include
fluticasone (Flovent Diskus, Flovent HFA), budesonide (Pulmicort
Flexhaler), mometasone (Asmanex), flunisolide (Aerobid), beclomethasone
(Qvar) and others. They are the most commonly prescribed type of long-term
asthma medication. You may need to use these medications for several days
to weeks before they reach their maximum benefit. Unlike oral
corticosteroids, these corticosteroid medications have a relatively low
risk of side effects and are generally safe for long-term use.
- Leukotriene modifiers. These oral medications include
montelukast (Singulair), zafirlukast (Accolate) and zileuton (Zyflo, Zyflo
CR). They help prevent asthma symptoms for up to 24 hours. In rare cases,
these medications have been linked to psychological reactions such as
agitation, aggression, hallucinations, depression and suicidal thinking.
Seek medical advice right away for any unusual reaction.
- Long-acting beta agonists
(LABAs). These
inhaled medications include salmeterol (Serevent Diskus) and formoterol
(Foradil Aerolizer). LABAs open the airways and reduce inflammation.
However, they've been linked to severe asthma attacks. LABAs should be
taken only in combination with an inhaled corticosteroid.
- Combination inhalers such as fluticasone and
salmeterol (Advair Diskus) and budesonide and formoterol (Symbicort).
These medications contain a LABA along with a
corticosteroid. Like other LABA medications, these medications may
increase your risk of having a severe asthma attack.
- Theophylline. This is a daily pill that
helps keep the airways open (bronchodilator). Theophylline (Theo-24,
Elixophyllin, others) relaxes the muscles around the airways to make
breathing easier. It's not used as often now as in past years.
Quick-relief (rescue) medications
Used as needed for rapid, short-term symptom relief during an asthma attack — or before exercise if your doctor recommends it. Types of quick-relief medications include:
Used as needed for rapid, short-term symptom relief during an asthma attack — or before exercise if your doctor recommends it. Types of quick-relief medications include:
- Short-acting beta agonists. These inhaled,
quick-relief bronchodilators can rapidly ease symptoms during an asthma
attack. They include albuterol (ProAir HFA, Ventolin HFA, others),
levalbuterol (Xopenex HFA) and pirbuterol (Maxair Autohaler). These
medications act within minutes, and effects last several hours.
- Ipratropium (Atrovent). Your doctor might
prescribe this inhaled medication for immediate relief of your symptoms.
Like other bronchodilators, ipratropium relaxes the airways, making it
easier to breathe. Ipratropium is mostly used for emphysema and chronic
bronchitis, but it's sometimes used to treat asthma attacks.
- Oral and intravenous
corticosteroids. These
medications relieve airway inflammation caused by severe asthma. Examples
include prednisone and methylprednisolone. They can cause serious side
effects when used long term, so they're used only on a short-term basis to
treat severe asthma symptoms.
Treatment for
allergy-induced asthma
If your asthma is triggered or worsened by allergies, you may benefit from allergy treatment as well. Allergy treatments include:
If your asthma is triggered or worsened by allergies, you may benefit from allergy treatment as well. Allergy treatments include:
- Allergy shots (immunotherapy). Immunotherapy injections
are generally given once a week for a few months, then once a month for a
period of three to five years. Over time, they gradually reduce your
immune system reaction to specific allergens.
- Omalizumab (Xolair). This medication is
specifically for people who have allergies and severe asthma. It acts by
altering the immune system. Omalizumab is delivered by injection every two
to four weeks.
- Allergy medications. These include oral and
nasal spray antihistamines and decongestants as well as corticosteroid,
cromolyn and ipratropium nasal sprays.
Don't rely on
quick-relief medications
Long-term asthma control medications — such as inhaled corticosteroids — are the cornerstone of asthma treatment. These medications keep asthma under control on a day-to-day basis and make it less likely you'll have an asthma attack.
Long-term asthma control medications — such as inhaled corticosteroids — are the cornerstone of asthma treatment. These medications keep asthma under control on a day-to-day basis and make it less likely you'll have an asthma attack.
If you do have an asthma
flare-up, a quick-relief inhaler can ease your symptoms right away. But if your
long-term control medications are working properly, you shouldn't need to use
your quick-relief inhaler very often. Keep a record of how many puffs you use
each week. If you need to use your quick-relief inhaler more often than your
doctor recommends, see your doctor. You probably need to adjust your long-term
control medication.
Bronchial thermoplasty
This treatment is used for severe asthma that doesn't improve with inhaled corticosteroids or other long-term asthma medications. Generally done in three outpatient visits, bronchial thermoplasty heats the insides of the airways in the lungs with an electrode, reducing the smooth muscle inside the airways. This limits the ability of the airways to tighten, making breathing easier and may reduce asthma attacks. Bronchial thermoplasty isn't widely available. More research is needed to determine whether the benefits of this treatment outweigh the possible risks and potential side effects.
This treatment is used for severe asthma that doesn't improve with inhaled corticosteroids or other long-term asthma medications. Generally done in three outpatient visits, bronchial thermoplasty heats the insides of the airways in the lungs with an electrode, reducing the smooth muscle inside the airways. This limits the ability of the airways to tighten, making breathing easier and may reduce asthma attacks. Bronchial thermoplasty isn't widely available. More research is needed to determine whether the benefits of this treatment outweigh the possible risks and potential side effects.
Asthma action plan
Work with your doctor to create an asthma action plan that outlines in writing when to take certain medications, or when to increase or decrease the dose of your medications based on your symptoms. Your asthma action plan should also list your triggers and the steps you need to take to avoid them. Your asthma plan may also involve tracking your asthma symptoms or using a peak flow meter on a regular basis to monitor how well your treatment is controlling your asthma.
Work with your doctor to create an asthma action plan that outlines in writing when to take certain medications, or when to increase or decrease the dose of your medications based on your symptoms. Your asthma action plan should also list your triggers and the steps you need to take to avoid them. Your asthma plan may also involve tracking your asthma symptoms or using a peak flow meter on a regular basis to monitor how well your treatment is controlling your asthma.
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