Asthma
What is asthma?
Asthma is a breathing problem. Your child may have a lot
of attacks with wheezing (a high-pitched sound) and
coughing. Your child's chest may feel tight. Asthma
attacks can be triggered by exercise, cold viruses, cold
air, strong emotions, and smoke or other irritants in the
air. Attacks can also be caused by allergens such as
pollens or animal dander.
How can I take care of my child?
- Make sure your child uses the asthma medicine your
health care provider prescribed. Your child may need
more than one type of medicine: one to prevent
attacks (controller medicine) and another to help stop
an attack once it has started (quick-relief medicine).
Ask your health care provider when to use each kind.
Make sure that you and your child know how to use
all prescribed medicines correctly.
Preventive Medicine: Your child's controller medicine
is _____________________. Give ___ puffs every ___ hours
every day.
Quick-relief Medicine: Your child's quick relief
medicine is _____________________. Give ___ puffs every
___ hours for ___ days OR give one nebulizer treatment
every ___ hours for ___days.
- Use a valved holding chamber, or spacer. Metered dose
inhalers (MDIs) should always be used with a spacer.
This attaches to the inhaler and helps your child get
all the medicine to his or her lungs. Use a mask if
your child has trouble with the mouthpiece. Make sure
you have a mask that fits.
- Your child may need special treatments. Your child may
need to use a nebulizer machine to take his medicine.
Your child's nebulization treatment should contain 1
premixed vial of ____________________given every ______
hours for ____ days.
OR
Your child's nebulization treatment should contain _____
ml of _____________________ mixed with ________ ml of
____________________. Give a treatment every _____ hours
for ____ days.
- Oral steroids or other medicine. Your child's oral
medicine is ______________________. Give _______ every
___ hours for ___ days.
- Don't wait to start treatment. Start the inhaler or
medicine when your child first coughs or wheezes.
- Have your child use an inhaler before exercise. Your
child may also cough or wheeze during exercise. Use a
quick-relief medicine 10 minutes before your child plans
to exercise.
How can I help prevent asthma attacks?
- Make sure your child stays away from triggers like
feather pillows, tobacco smoke, and pets.
- Learn how to dust-proof your child's bedroom.
- Have your child take a bath or shower. This can help if
your child wheezes after being around grass, pollen,
weeds, or animals.
Call your child's health care provider right away if:
- Your child has a hard time breathing or the wheezing is
severe.
- The wheezing does not get better after the second dose of
quick-relief asthma medicine.
- Your child's peak flow is in the red zone.
Call your child's health care provider within 24 hours if:
- The wheezing is not completely gone in 5 days.
- Your child needs to use the quick-relief inhaler every 4
hours for more than 1 day.
- You have other questions or concerns.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.