Internal Medicine

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0521779407-04 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:8


172 Asthma

tests
Laboratory
■Basic blood tests: CBC (eosinophilia common)

Specific Tests
■Pulmonary function:
➣Every patient should have complete PFTs once to confirm diag-
nosis
➣Follow with spirometry and/or peak flow
➣May be normal between attacks
➣Variable airflow obstruction (decreased FEV 1 , FVC, peak flow)
➣Reversible (≥12% and≥200 mL) with inhaled beta-agonist
■IgE elevated in most patients
■Allergy skin tests useful to identify triggers to avoid, or for hyposen-
sitization in severe cases

Other Tests
■Bronchoprovocation (histamine or methacholine):
➣Asthmatics unusually sensitive (PC 20 =8 mg/mL)
➣Useful to confirm diagnosis if PFTs normal
differential diagnosis
■Children: bronchiolitis, cystic fibrosis
■Adults: COPD, vocal cord dysfunction, allergic bronchopulmonary
aspergillosis, Churg-Strauss syndrome, polyarteritis nosodum, car-
diac asthma

management
■See NHLBI National Asthma Education and Prevention Program,
Expert Panel Report 2: Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Man-
agement of Asthma (http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/guidelines/asthma/
asthgdln.htm)

Chronic Asthma
What to Do First
■Assess severity:
➣Mild intermittent: symptoms≤2 d/wk;≤2 nights/mo;
FEV
1 ≥80%; PEF variability <20%
➣Mild persistent: symptoms >2 d/wk; >2 nights/mo;
FEV 1 ≥80%; PEF variability 20–30%
➣Moderate persistent: symptoms daily; >1 night/wk;
FEV 1 60–80%; PEF variability >30%
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