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Care at Home

  1. Quick-Relief Asthma Medicine:
    • Start your quick-relief medicine (e.g. albuterol inhaler or nebulizer) at the first sign of any coughing or shortness of breath (don't wait for wheezing). Use inhaler (2 puffs each time) or nebulizer every 4 hours. Continue the quick-relief medicine until you have not wheezed or coughed for 48 hours.
    • The best "cough medicine" for an adult with asthma is always the asthma medicine. (Note: Don't use cough suppressants, but cough drops may help a tickly cough.)
  2. Long-Term-Control Asthma Medicine: If you are using a controller medicine (e.g., inhaled steroids or cromolyn), continue to take it as directed.
  3. Fluids: Try to drink normal amounts of clear fluids (e.g., water). Reason: adequate hydration makes it easier to cough up the sticky lung mucus.
  4. Humidifier: If the air is dry, use a cool mist humidifier to prevent drying of the upper airway.
  5. Hay Fever: For nose allergy symptoms, it's OK to take antihistamines. Reasons: poor control of allergic rhinitis makes asthma worse, whereas antihistamines don't make asthma worse.
  6. Remove Allergens: Take a shower to remove pollens, animal dander, or other allergens from the body and hair.
  7. Avoid Triggers: Avoid known triggers of asthma attacks (e.g., tobacco smoke, cats, other pets, feather pillows, exercise).
  8. Work with Your Doctor: There is no cure for asthma but you can take charge and learn to control it. The best way to take charge of asthma is to work with your doctor (over many months) to find the right controller (preventive) medicine so your asthma is under control. If you keep having asthma attacks, then the asthma is not under control. People can die from asthma if they do not take it seriously and work with a doctor to control it.
  9. Expected Course: If treatment is started early, most asthma attacks are quickly brought under control. All wheezing should be gone by 5 days.
  10. IF your symptoms become worse: Review Should I Call? recommendations.
  1. Symptom Description
  2. Should I Call?

Adult Housecalls. Copyright © 2001-2008. David Thompson, M.D.
Reviewed/Modified: Jan. 2008 by Intermountain Healthcare, Inc.


© 2007 Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City, Utah. All Rights Reserved.