"Acute" asthma in adults.
Open Access
- 1 February 1979
- Vol. 34 (1), 36-39
- https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.34.1.36
Abstract
Forty-four adult patients with acute severe asthma were studied on admission to a general hospital to determine the mode of presentation and clinical severity of the acute illness. Most patients described poorly controlled wheezing for a mean period of five weeks before a more rapid deterioration, usually over 24 hours, caused them to seek medical attention. The clinical severity of the acute attach was not related to the duration of acute wheezing before admission to hospital. Recovery, studied in 11 of the patients, was slow, and most had reached only 70% of their predicted spirometric values after seven days' treatment in hospital. The rate of recovery was not influenced by the antecedent history of acute wheezing. Very sudden deterioration from a background of good control appears to be uncommon in adults with asthma who present to hospital as emergencies, and it is likely that improvement in the standard of routine management of asthmatics at home would prevent many such admissions.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Asthma deaths in Cardiff 1963-74: 53 deaths in hospital.BMJ, 1976
- High-dose corticosteroids in severe acute asthma.BMJ, 1976
- Asthma deaths in Cardiff 1963-74: 90 deaths outside hospital.BMJ, 1976
- Edinburgh emergency asthma admission service.BMJ, 1975
- A survey of asthma mortality in patients between ages 35 and 64 in the Greater London hospitals in 1971.Thorax, 1975
- A Double-Blind Trial of Corticosteroid Therapy in Status AsthmaticusPediatrics, 1974
- Assessment and management of severe asthmaAmerican Journal Of Medicine, 1971
- The intensive therapy of asthma.1971
- A study of the clinical course and arterial blood gas tensions of patients in status asthmaticus.1968
- Investigation into use of drugs preceding death from asthma.BMJ, 1968