Pharm 4 Resp pt3 Flashcards

1
Q

2 main causes of asthma

A
2nd hand smoke
Allergic march (keeping the kid in a bubble)
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2
Q

Diff btwn Asthma-Inflammation and Bronchospasm. (Comparing the muscle and airway lining, each surrounding the airway)

A

Asthma: the airway lining swells, the muscle lining is normal. Airway lining swelling makes it like breathing through a straw.
Bronchoconstriction: the muscle tightens and constricts the airway.

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3
Q

Why do people outgrow asthma?

A

kids have o: if that closes up, they get asthma

adults have O: if that closes up, their airway is still wide open enough to breathe normally.

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4
Q

COPD is actually a term that groups two closely related diseases:

A

Chronic Bronchitis & Emphysema

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5
Q

How to differentiate between asthma and COPD?

A

spirometry.
If you have a reversible obstructive flow, that’s asthma.
If it’s not reversible, that’s COPD.

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6
Q

What’s WBC are affected in asthma?

A

CD4 T-Lymphocytes, Eosinophils

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7
Q

What WBC are affected in COPD?

A

CD8 T-Lymphocytes, Macrophages, Neutrophils

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8
Q

5 Inhaled Medical Delivery Devices

A
Metered Dose Inhaler (MDI)
Dry Powder Inhaler (DPI)
Spacer/holding Chamber
Spacer/holding Chamber with face mask
Nebulizer
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9
Q

Peak flow is unique to the patient.

Peak flow <__% needs help

A

<80% needs help

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10
Q

Asthma severity classification:
Days with sx, Nights with sx, FEV1.
Step 1

A

Mild Intermittent

80%

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11
Q

Asthma severity classification:
Days with sx, Nights with sx, FEV1.
Step 2

A

Mild Persistent
Days: >2/week but 2/month
FEV1: >80%

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12
Q

Asthma severity classification:
Days with sx, Nights with sx, FEV1.
Step 3

A

Moderate Persistent
Days: Daily
Nights: >1/week
FEV1: 60-80%

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13
Q

Asthma severity classification:
Days with sx, Nights with sx, FEV1.
Step 4

A

Severe Persistent
Days: Continual
Nights: Frequent
FEV1: <60%

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14
Q

The patients “step” of asthma severity is determined by:

A

their most severe features

days, nights, fev1, pef variability

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15
Q

3 as-needed, quick-relief, rescue meds (types) for Asthma

A

Short-acting beta2-agonists
Anticholinergics
Systemic corticosteroids

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16
Q

5 types of daily, long-term control meds for asthma:

A
Corticosteroids (inhaled and systemic)
Cromolyn/nedocromil
Long-acting beta2-agonists (LABA)
Leukotriene inhibitors
Methylxanthines
17
Q

___ are clearly the most effective long-term-therapy for persistent asthma

A

Inhaled Corticosteroids

There is a small or no risk for adverse events when prescribed at recommended doses

18
Q

3 tips for using ICS for asthma

A

spacer and rinse mouth after use
lowest possible dose
in combination with long-acting beta2-agonists

19
Q

Kids who gets constant asthma attacks get chronic basement membrane changes, aka, scarred alveoli. The drug to prevent with this is:

A

ICS

20
Q

Effects of ICS on children’s growth:

A

the average child for the 1st year on HIGH-dose ICS will have a ½” growth delay, which they then reverse with a growth spurt after the first year.
low-medium doses usually show no effect on growth

21
Q

3 examples of ICS for asthma.

They all have different doses.

A

Beclomethasone, Budesonide, Fluticasone

22
Q

Not a substitute for anti-inflammatory therapy (not a substitute for ICS)
Not for acute exacerbation and not a rescue medication
Not appropriate for monotherapy
Beneficial when added to ICS

A

Long-Acting Beta2-Agonist

23
Q

Single most effective medication for relief of acute bronchospasm

A

Short-Acting Beta2-Agonists

24
Q

What suggests inadquate control of SABA for asthma?

A

> 2 canisters annually

25
Q

2 SABA to know:

A

Albuterol, Levalbuterol