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Cases from Aug 2014
Ryan Padrez & Patrick Peebles
9/10/14
Discussion of Cases

Status Asthmaticus
What is Asthma?

1. Airway obstruction
 Bronchoconstriction
 Inflammation
2. Reversible
 Improves in response to
bronchodilators
3. Recurrent
 Triggers: Infection, stress,
allergens, exercise, cold,
foods, smells, etc
Inhaled beta-agonists: Albuterol

 Safe and well-tolerated in kids
 HR up to 200 commonly seen
 Intermittent albuterol (MDI and nebulizer)
 Peak activity at 30 minutes
 Dosing: 0.15mg/kg/dose– titrate to effect
 Continuous albuterol
 Starting dose: 0.5mg/kg/hour (or 5-15 mg/hour)
 May go up as tolerated
Ipratropium bromide (Atrovent)

 Anticholinergic
 Bronchodilation and decreased secretions
 No cardiovascular side effects, very cheap
 RCT’s of albuterol/atrovent vs albuterol alone
 Clinical improvement
 Decreased hospitalization
 Especially most severe
 Dosing: 3 doses initially, q6h after that
 No evidence for continued benefit after first 3 doses
Steroids

 Systemic: short burst (3-5 days)




Prevent hospitalization, reduce duration of symptoms
Most effective when given early in exacerbation
IV/IM equivalent to PO
Options
 Solumedrol/prednisone 1-2mg/kg/dose (max 60mg)
 Dexamethasone 0.6mg/kg/day
 Of note: no established role of inhaled steroids in
acute exacerbation
Case #1

Management of Status Asthmaticus
in
ED (or 6M Urgent Care)
Case #1: 18mo with RAD

 CC: 18mo boy with history of RAD with viral illnesses
presents to ER with increased work of breathing
 HPI: 1 day viral URI symptoms, tactile fevers, stuffy nose;
difficulty breathing overnight, fussy and poor PO intake
in the morning, parents brought into ER at 8am on 8/31




Meds: none
All: NKDA
PMH: as noted, immunizations up to date until 1yo
Social History: intact family
Family History: mom +allergies/asthma
Case #1: 18mo with RAD

 Initial Exam in ER:
 T: 37.1, P 170, RR 50-60, O2 sat 85% on RA.
 Gen: nasal flaring, obvious respiratory distress,
somnolent
 Lungs: Supra-clavicular, intercostal, subcostal
retractions, scattered expiratory wheezes
 Brought to Zone 1, Bed 4 and a Zone 1 ED resident
assigned to case
Case #1: ED Management

 8:28am: Neb x1 (albuterol + ipratropium bromide)
 8:47am: Neb x2 (albuterol + ipratropium bromide)
 9am re-assessment by nurse :


T 37.1, P 178, RR 48, O2 sat 98% RA
VBG: 7.18/49/32/-10 and Lactate 2.5
 ~9am: IV Dexamethasone x1 + IV fluids 20ml/kg NS bolus
 ~9:30: Neb x3 (albuterol + ipratropium bromide)
 10am: repeat labs and CXR




VBG: 7.27/35/70/-10
CBC: 9.9>38.3<234
Chem: 143/4.0/113/12/11/0.22
CXR: no abnormalities
 Peds Chief Resident assessment at ~10am:

Reactive to exam but not crying and not verbally interactive, sleepy, obvious
respiratory distress, nasal flaring, retractions with faint wheezing
 What was done well and what could be different
at this point in time?
Asthma Algorithm


Case#1: Continued
 To Recap:

 ~1 hr 20 min the team gave albuterol/atrovent X3, IV
dexamethasone, IV fluid bolus
 RR 40-50, HR180s, O2 sat 98% on facemask
 Gen: looks sleepy, tachypnea with flaring and retractions, not
very verbal
 Lungs: faint wheezing
 What does this child have?
Status Asthmaticus
 ED team asks peds team if next steps are to give:
 More IV fluids and IV Mag
Discussion Question: What could be done to optimize
management if we think child has status asthmaticus?
Status Asthmaticus

 Status Asthmaticus definition:
“unresponsive to inhaled
bronchodilators”
 Next steps if concerned for status
asthmaticus:




Maximize O2 delivery
Move to continuous bronchodilator
Get IV access
Consider dose of IV steroids
What if none of these things work???
nd
2
Line Medications

 Magnesium
 Epinephrine
 Terbutaline
Evidence: Magnesium

 Bronchodilation via SM relaxation
 Single IV dose:
 RCT data in children has established safety and
efficacy
 Most beneficial in severe asthmaticus
 Repeated doses: utility unclear
 Must be infused over 20 minutes
 Adverse effects: flushing, nausea, hypotension
Epinephrine

 Easily available!
 Found on code cart, easy to dose
 Fastest absorption when IM, in lateral thigh
 Previously standard of therapy, now less favorable
due to cardiac effects
Evidence: Terbutaline

 IV beta-agonist,
 Less B2-selective than albuterol
 Efficacy: no consistent decrease in symptoms or
length of stay shown
 Recent trials: trend toward improvement?
 Minor side effects common
 Can be given SC or IV
 Loading dose of 10 mcg/kg SC or IV
 Infusion of 0.4mcg/kg/min
Recommendations:
Systemic Bronchodilators

 Magnesium first-line systemic bronchodilator, for
pediatric status asthmaticus
 Consider terbutaline as second-line agents
 IM Epinephrine if no others available
Back to Case

 In ED Peds Team Ordered:





Continuous Albuterol at 20mg/hr
IV solumedrol
IV magnesium sulfate 40mg/kg x1
IV bolus of fluids #3 followed by 1x maintenance
Admit to 4E
(after mag, patient began to look better, crying, better air
movement, more prominent wheezing)
Key Points for Case #1

 For ED Management of Severe Asthma
 Ensure systemic steroids given <1 hour
 consider IV route if severe presentation
 Duo-nebs x3 with poor response move to continuous
nebulized albuterol and can start 5-15mg/hr and
titrate up to effect
 Get IV access early
 IV magnesium the most effective systemic
bronchodilator for status asthmaticus
Case #2

Management of Status Asthmaticus
in
4E ICU
Case #2: 11yo M with Severe Asthma

 ID: 11yo M with history of asthma on Qvar with very poor
compliance presents to ED with significant increased work of
breathing.
 HPI: normal state of health, but recently moved in with father
in SF x1 week with cats and cigarette smoke in home; coupled
with poor compliance with Qvar (ICS controller). Brought to ER
by ambulance. In route received two albuterol nebs by EMS.
 Meds: Qvar, singulair, albuterol PRN
All: NKDA
 PMH: multiple admissions for asthma, no intubations,
immunizations UTD
 Family History: 2 family members with asthma
Case #2: In ED

 Exam (s/p 2 nebs in ambulance)
 Vitals: RR 40-50, O2 sats 92% room air
 Gen: tripod position, significant respiratory distress, 2-3 word sentences
 Lungs: retractions prominent, decreased air movement
 ED Management:








Continuous albuterol 10mg/hr with 100% O2 face mask
IM Epi x1
IV solumedrol
IV Mag x1
Repeat IM Epi
VBG: 7.3/52/-0.8
CXR: no focal infiltrate
Admitted to 4E ICU with “status asthmaticus”
Case #2: In ICU

 Pediatric Team Management:




Continue albuterol 20mg/hr
HFNC 20L/min
IV solumedrol q6h
IVF at maintenance
Respiratory Therapy
Teaching

• Different devices to provide O2 support on 4E vs 6A vs 6M
• Different ways to deliver continuous albuterol
• Optimal flow rate when giving albuterol with HFNC
Case #2: In ICU

 Pediatric Team Management:




Continue albuterol 20mg/hr
HFNC 20L/min
IV solumedrol q6h
IVF at maintenance
Case #2: In ICU

 Continuous albuterol neb ran out in early morning
hours for uncertain amount of time
 Significant respiratory distress resulting in:
 Epi #3 IM given
 IV Mag #2 given
 Continuous Albuterol 20mg/hr neb with HFNC
Discussion Question: What system issues that
may have lead to this error?
Back to Case#2: In ICU

 Hospital Night #2:
 Overnight peds team weaned from 20mg/hr
continuous albuterol to 15mg/hr
 In AM worsening respiratory distress and increased
expiratory wheezes
 Team elected to increase albuterol back to 20mg/hr
Discussion Question: Was this patient weaned too
quickly? What resources or metrics can we use to guide
our weaning management?
Review of Key Points

 Inhaled bronchodilators are first line agent in mild,
mod and severe asthma
 Use aggressively, including moving to continuous
early
 Start steroids early <1 hr
 Magnesium is the most beneficial systemic
bronchodilator in status asthmaticus
 Consider systematic approach to weaning