What are 3 important questions to ask during an asthma annual review?
What are the characteristics of vesicular breathing?
What are the characteristics of bronchial breathing?
In what conditions is bronchial breathing heard?
(Think “3Cs”)
What are the characteristics of a wheeze?
When is a high pitch wheeze heard?
Due to smaller airways narrowing in bronchospasm (i.e. asthma)
When is a low pitch wheeze heard?
When smaller airways narrow due to secretions (i.e. chronic bronchitis)
When is a polyphonic wheeze heard?
When there is variable degree of bronchospasm (i.e. asthma) and is more commonly heard
When is a monophonic wheeze heard?
When there’s a localized obstruction
What are the characteristics of crackles?
What conditions have the following crackles:
What are the conditions that produce fine crackles?
What are the conditions that produce coarse crackles?
What are the characteristics of pleural rub?
What conditions do you get pleural rub in?
List 5 conditions, other than asthma, where you can hear a wheeze on auscultation
What should you recommend for patients with exercise-induced asthma?
Take their bronchodilator (short-acting B2 agonist - salbutamol) inhaler with them and use it just before exercise to prevent an attack
Why it is particularly important to have the flu vaccination when you have asthma? What other vaccinations would you recommend for patients with chronic asthma?
Flu can be more serious for people with asthma, even if their asthma is mild or their symptoms are well-controlled by medication. This is because people with asthma have swollen and sensitive airways, and influenza can cause further inflammation of the airways and lungs. Influenza infection in the lungs can trigger asthma attacks and a worsening of asthma symptoms. It also can lead to pneumonia and other acute respiratory diseases.
A one-off vaccination against Pneumococcal disease is also recommended
Define the term peak expiratory flow rate
The maximal rate that a person can exhale during a short maximal expiratory effort after a full inspiration
How do you predict someone’s peak flow?
Calculated using the patient’s sex and height
How do you record serial readings of peak flow and for how long?
For diagnosis 2-4 weeks, twice daily (NICE 2017)
For Occupational Asthma it may require 2-4 hourly reading over several weeks
What on the peak flow chart would indicate asthma that is well-managed?
Less variation between peaks and trough levels
What are asthma triggers?
What is the pathophysiology of asthma?