Asthma: Clinical sciences

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Asthma: Clinical sciences

Focused chief complaint

Abdominal pain

Approach to biliary colic: Clinical sciences
Approach to periumbilical and lower abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Approach to pneumoperitoneum and peritonitis (perforated viscus): Clinical sciences
Approach to postoperative abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Approach to upper abdominal pain: Clinical sciences
Abdominal aortic aneurysm: Clinical sciences
Acute coronary syndrome: Clinical sciences
Acute mesenteric ischemia: Clinical sciences
Acute pancreatitis: Clinical sciences
Adnexal torsion: Clinical sciences
Alcohol-induced hepatitis: Clinical sciences
Aortic dissection: Clinical sciences
Appendicitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to ascites: Clinical sciences
Cholecystitis: Clinical sciences
Choledocholithiasis and cholangitis: Clinical sciences
Chronic mesenteric ischemia: Clinical sciences
Chronic pancreatitis: Clinical sciences
Colonic volvulus: Clinical sciences
Community-acquired pneumonia: Clinical sciences
Diverticulitis: Clinical sciences
Ectopic pregnancy: Clinical sciences
Endometriosis: Clinical sciences
Gastritis: Clinical sciences
Gastroesophageal reflux disease: Clinical sciences
Hepatitis A and E: Clinical sciences
Hepatitis B: Clinical sciences
Hepatitis C: Clinical sciences
Herpes zoster infection (shingles): Clinical sciences
Ileus: Clinical sciences
Infectious gastroenteritis: Clinical sciences
Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn disease): Clinical sciences
Inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis): Clinical sciences
Inguinal hernias: Clinical sciences
Intra-abdominal abscess: Clinical sciences
Irritable bowel syndrome: Clinical sciences
Ischemic colitis: Clinical sciences
Large bowel obstruction: Clinical sciences
Lower urinary tract infection: Clinical sciences
Malaria: Clinical sciences
Nephrolithiasis: Clinical sciences
Paraesophageal and hiatal hernia: Clinical sciences
Peptic ulcer disease: Clinical sciences
Pulmonary embolism: Clinical sciences
Pyelonephritis: Clinical sciences
Rectus sheath hematoma: Clinical sciences
Retroperitoneal hematoma: Clinical sciences
Sickle cell disease: Clinical sciences
Small bowel obstruction: Clinical sciences
Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: Clinical sciences
Testicular torsion (pediatrics): Clinical sciences

Altered mental status

Approach to altered mental status: Clinical sciences
Acute stroke (ischemic or hemorrhagic) or TIA: Clinical sciences
Alcohol withdrawal: Clinical sciences
Approach to encephalitis: Clinical sciences
Approach to epilepsy: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypercalcemia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypernatremia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypocalcemia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypoglycemia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hyponatremia: Clinical sciences
Approach to hypothyroidism: Clinical sciences
Approach to increased intracranial pressure: Clinical sciences
Approach to mood disorders: Clinical sciences
Approach to schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders: Clinical sciences
Approach to shock: Clinical sciences
Approach to traumatic brain injury: Clinical sciences
Aspiration pneumonia and pneumonitis: Clinical sciences
Community-acquired pneumonia: Clinical sciences
Delirium: Clinical sciences
Diabetic ketoacidosis: Clinical sciences
Hepatic encephalopathy: Clinical sciences
Hospital-acquired and ventilator-associated pneumonia: Clinical sciences
Hyperosmolar hyperglycemic state: Clinical sciences
Hypothermia: Clinical sciences
Hypovolemic shock: Clinical sciences
Lower urinary tract infection: Clinical sciences
Meningitis and brain abscess: Clinical sciences
Opioid intoxication and overdose: Clinical sciences
Opioid withdrawal syndrome: Clinical sciences
Pyelonephritis: Clinical sciences
Subarachnoid hemorrhage: Clinical sciences
Substance use disorder: Clinical sciences
Uremic encephalopathy: Clinical sciences

Decision-Making Tree

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Asthma is an episodic, chronic respiratory disorder characterized by airway obstruction caused by inflammation and hyperresponsiveness of the bronchial smooth muscle. Asthma is reversible, which means the obstruction can virtually disappear with medications like bronchodilators, and inducible, which means the obstruction can occur in response to a variety of stimuli; including allergens, irritants, and respiratory tract infections.

Clinical manifestations are highly variable, ranging from infrequent and mild symptoms that have minimal functional limitations, to frequent acute asthma exacerbations causing significant impairment in functional capacity, and even life-threatening respiratory failure that’s often referred to as status asthmaticus.

Now, if you suspect asthma, you should first perform an ABCDE assessment to determine whether your patient is stable or unstable. If they’re unstable, stabilize their airway, breathing and circulation, obtain IV access, and begin continuous vital sign monitoring including heart rate and blood pressure.

Next, obtain focused history and physical, order labs, including ABG, and perform spirometry to assess the patient’s peak expiratory flow, or PEF, for short. Finally, don’t forget to place your patient on pulse oximetry. History typically reveals shortness of breath, cough, and chest tightness. On the flip side, physical exam is likely to show tachypnea and use of accessory inspiratory muscles. In addition, auscultation can reveal bilateral wheezing due to inflamed and narrowed airways, and if the condition worsens, you may find decreased or even absent breath sounds, since less air is reaching alveoli.

Next ABG might reveal arterial pH of 7.35 or less and pCO2 above 45 mmHg, indicating respiratory acidosis and hypercapnia; while spirometry usually shows PEF less than 40%. Finally, pulse oximetry might demonstrate saturation below 90%.

If this is the case, suspect acute asthma exacerbation, or even status asthmaticus, and immediately administer supplemental oxygen at 100% FiO2, inhaled bronchodilators including a short-acting muscarinic antagonist like ipratropium and a short-acting beta agonist or SABA like albuterol, as well as systemic corticosteroids, either oral or IV. If the patient doesn’t respond to treatment, you can also give a single dose of IV magnesium. Lastly, in severe cases, you may even proceed with endotracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation, especially if your patient has altered mental status, cyanosis, or inability to maintain respiratory effort, as well as worsening hypercapnia and respiratory acidosis.

Now let's go back to the ABCDE assessment and discuss stable patients. First, perform a focused history and physical. Your patient is likely to report shortness of breath, coughing, and chest tightness, often triggered by allergens and exercise, and they may even have an existing diagnosis of asthma. On the other hand, physical examination often reveals tachypnea and wheezing. If this is the case, suspect asthma, or if your patient has already been diagnosed with asthma, suspect worsening of its severity.

You’ll want to monitor the patient's vital signs, including heart rate, blood pressure, respirations, and oxygen saturation. Finally, provide supplemental oxygen to maintain an oxygen saturation above 90%. The next step in patient management is to obtain spirometry, including FVC and FEV1 to confirm the diagnosis. FVC, or forced vital capacity, is the maximum amount of air a person can forcibly exhale from their lungs after a maximum inhalation, while FEV1 is the volume of air exhaled during the first second of this forced exhalation.

Now, here’s a clinical pearl to keep in mind! Spirometry can be performed with a simple handheld spirometer. First, have your patient take a maximal breath in, then forcibly exhale into the spirometer until all of the air is emptied from their lungs. This will generate a flow-volume loop, which will differentiate between obstructive and restrictive patterns of lung disease.

Now that you’ve completed spirometry, calculate the patient’s FEV1 to FVC ratio. If the ratio is within normal range, or even elevated, for the patient’s age, consider an alternative diagnosis. On the other hand, if the ratio is below normal range, suspect an obstructive lung disease, which includes asthma. But this is not enough to confirm the diagnosis so your next step is to perform bronchodilator reversibility, or BDR testing. BDR testing consists of giving an inhaled dose of a SABA, followed by repeat spirometry, paying particular attention to the FEV1.

Sources

  1. "2020 Focused Updates to the Asthma Management Guidelines: A Report from the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program Coordinating Committee Expert Panel Working Group" J Allergy Clin Immunol (2020)
  2. "How to interpret spirometry in a child with suspected asthma" Arch Dis Child Educ Pract Ed (2022)
  3. "A stepwise approach to the interpretation of pulmonary function tests" Am Fam Physician (2014)
  4. "Global Initiative for Asthma Strategy 2021: Executive Summary and Rationale for Key Changes" J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract (2022)