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What to do During an Asthma Attack

Developing an asthma crisis plan. If your child has asthma, you should be well
trained by your pediatrician and prepared with the appropriate medications in
case an asthma attack or flare-up occurs. Such a plan must be determined
beforehand in your doctor’s office. Don’t wait until your child has an attack
and then call the doctor’s office for advice. Here is how you can determine the
severity of an attack and what appropriate measures can be taken.

 Remain calm. Calm your child down.


 Evaluate the breathing. Take your child’s shirt off and observe his
chest:
1. Are there retractions (the chest sucking in below the ribs or at
the base of the neck)? Are the retractions barely visible or very
deep and obvious?
2. Is your child breathing fast and heavy, using his shoulders to try
to get deep enough breaths?
3. Count the number of breaths he takes in 15 seconds. Multiply
this by four. This tells you how many breaths per minute. If it is
over 60 in infants to age two, over 50 in young children to age
eight, or over 40 in older children, this is too fast.
4. Is there audible wheezing? Is it very mild or very louder and tight
sounding? Some children can even be so tight during an attack
that not enough air is even moving in and out to make a
wheezing noise.
 Check the peak flow several times.
1. GREEN LIGHT If it is 80 – 100% of normal, that is a good sign.
2. YELLOW LIGHT If it is 50 – 80 % of normal, then your child
needs home treatments.
3. RED LIGHT If it is less than 50 % of normal, then your child
needs more treatments and medical attention.
 Give albuterol treatment. If things seem mild, use the inhaler. If more
severe, us a nebulizer if you have one.
 Observe your child. Albuterol sometimes doesn’t take effect for 15
minutes.
1. Has the breathing slowed down?
2. Have the retractions become less pronounced?
3. Has the wheezing improved?
4. Is the breathing less labored?
 Re-check the peak flow after half an hour.
 If it has improved, you can be reassured.
1. If it has not improved, consider how your child is doing overall.
2. If you see overall improvement, continue albuterol treatments
every 2 – 4 hours as needed until he is stable.
 If you don’t see much improvement, repeat the albuterol inhalation.
Most prescriptions will say to only use every 4 hours, but it is okay to
use it several times in one or two hours to overcome a bad attack.
 Taking oral steroids. There are two situations where your child may
need to take oral steroids for 3 – 5 days to overcome an attack:
1. If an attack stays moderate for more than 12 – 18 hours – your
child seems to need treatments every 3 or 4 hours, and the
wheezing keeps getting worse again when treatments wear off.
2. If a mild attack persists for more than 5 days – your child is
doing ok, but seems to need treatments 3 – 4 times a day as
wheezing and other symptoms recur.

WHEN TO GO TO THE EMERGENCY ROOM OR CALL YOUR DOCTOR

 If you still don’t see any improvement after two or three treatments,
and the attack is still severe, you should go to an emergency room or
your doctor’s office right away.
 In addition, if at any time you notice your child’s lips are blue, go to an
emergency room right away. This could be a sign the lungs are so
closed off that not enough oxygen is getting into your child.
 If your child’s mental status is lowered – lethargic, won’t focus on you,
confused speech. This could also be a sign of inadequate oxygen.
 If at any time you are not sure about your child’s status, call your
doctor.

FREQUENT FOLLOW UP WITH YOUR DOCTOR


One of the keys to understanding, preventing, and controlling asthma is
regular follow up appointments with your pediatrician. Don’t expect to have
your child’s asthma completely evaluated all in one visit. It may take several
visits for your doctor to adequately educated you on asthma prevention, find
the right maintenance medications for your child, teach you about
medications, and go over an appropriate asthma crisis plan with you. If your
child is on daily maintenance medications, periodic visits with the doctor can
help you wean your child off the medications appropriately, and may help
determine if your child is overall improving or getting worse.

To help your doctor prescribe the most effective asthma prevention and
treatment program chart your child’s progress. Your doctor needs to know
how much the asthma is interfering in you’re your child’s life: sports, school,
play, etc. Good luck to you and your child as you successfully overcome this
illness. With appropriate education, prevention, and treatment, asthma can be
well controlled and your child can lead a normal life.

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