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HY points followed by a quiz at the end
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Asthma drugs
Albuterol (salbutamol)
MOA of albuterol?
- Short-acting beta-2 agonist.
How is it used?
- First-line treatment for acute attacks.
- Patient uses inhaler when feeling asthmatic symptoms.
- Used as a nebulizer (face mask) in the emergency setting.
Fluticasone
MOA of fluticasone?
- Inhaled corticosteroid (ICS).
How is it used?
- Used to prevent recurrences of asthma.
- Added second-line to albuterol for outpatient treatment – i.e., if patient has weekly occurrences of asthma, rather than just receiving an albuterol inhaler to abort acute episodes, a preventative ICS can be added to the regimen.
- Has no utility in the acute setting.
- In the acute setting, IV steroids (methylprednisolone) can be given, but ICS have no role.
Salmeterol
MOA of salmeterol?
- Long-acting beta-2 agonist.
How is it used?
- Can be added third-line for outpatient asthma management for patients already using an albuterol and fluticasone inhaler but who still have occurrences.
- In other words, the first three drugs for outpatient management are: albuterol –> fluticasone –> salmeterol.
Zileuton
MOA of zileuton?
- Lipoxygenase inhibitor (enzyme that normally synthesized leukotrienes, which cause bronchoconstriction).
When is it used?
- Patients already on albuterol, fluticasone, and salmeterol inhalers but who still have intractable asthma.
- Good for patients with history of NSAID/aspirin-induced asthma (i.e., Samter triad –> NSAID/aspirin hypersensitivity, NSAID/aspirin-induced asthma, nasal polyps):
- Arachidonic acid is a precursor molecule of both leukotrienes and prostaglandins.
- Lipoxygenase catalyzes synthesis of leukotrienes.
- Cyclooxygenase catalyzes synthesis of prostaglandins.
- NSAIDs (including aspirin) inhibit cyclooxygenase (COX), thereby preventing prostaglandin synthesis. Arachidonic acid is then shunted down the lipoxygenase pathway toward leukotrienes –> bronchoconstriction.
- 16M + takes aspirin for sore muscles after snowboarding + gets wheezing. Q asks: what is most likely to be seen on physical exam? –> answer = nasal polyps.
- 16M + takes aspirin for sore muscles after snowboarding + gets wheezing. Q asks: which drug should most likely be avoided in this patient? –> answer = ibuprofen; wrong answer = acetaminophen (not an NSAID).
Montelukast, zafirlukast
MOA of montelukast and zafirlukast?
- Leukotriene receptor antagonists.
- Leukotrienes cause bronchoconstriction, so antagonizing these receptors decreases bronchoconstriction.
When are they used?
- Same as zileuton.
Nedocromil, cromolyn sodium
MOA of nedocromil and cromolyn sodium?
- Mast cell stabilizers.
- Mast cells normally degranulate to release histamine –> stimulate H1 receptors on bronchioles + stimulation of afferent vagal fibers in the airways –> bronchoconstriction.
When are they used?
- Patients who have persistent attacks despite already using albuterol, fluticasone, and salmeterol.
Theophylline
MOA of theophylline?
- Phosphodiesterase inhibitor –> prevents breakdown of cAMP.
What are its side-effects?
- Not used due to neuro- and cardiotoxicity.
- Just know MOA + toxicities for USMLE.
Omalizumab
MOA of omalizumab?
- Monoclonal antibody against the Fc region of IgE.
When is it used?
- Intractable asthma refractory to multi-drug regimens, including patients already on oral prednisone.
- Patients who qualify for use have high serum IgE levels.
-Lizumab agents –> Benlizumab, Reslizumab, Mepolizumab –> “Ben Really likes Maple.” –> Benlizumab, Reslizumab, Mepolizumab
MOA of -lizumabs?
- Monoclonal antibodies against IL-5.
- IL-5 normally promotes eosinophil maturation.
When are they used?
- Intractable asthma in patients with eosinophilia, similar to omalizumab.
Methacholine
MOA of methacholine?
- Muscarinic receptor agonist
When is it used?
- To diagnose asthma. Not used in the treatment of asthma.
- Causes bronchoconstriction –> reproduces asthma symptoms and obstructive spirometry profile in patients with asthma.
- Patients who do not have asthma will not get symptom production with methacholine.
- Never used during acute attacks; used between attacks to merely reproduce symptoms.
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