Asthma; Roadside to Resus Part 1
The Resus Room - A podcast by Simon Laing, Rob Fenwick & James Yates

Asthma is a common disease and presents to acute healthcare services extremely frequently. The majority of presentations are mild exacerbations of a known diagnosis and are relatively simple to assess and treat, many being completely appropriate for out patient treatment. On the other hand around 200 deaths per year are attributable in the UK to asthma, and therefore in the relatively young group of patients there is a real potential for critical illness with catastrophic consequence if not treated effectively. The majority of these deaths occur prior to the patient making it to hospital making the prehospital phase extremely important and hugely stressful in these cases. It is also worth noting that of the deaths reported that many were associated with inadequate inhaled corticosteroids or steroid tablets and inadequate follow up, meaning that our encounter with these patients at all stages of their care even if not that severe at the point of assessment is a key opportunity to discuss and educate about treatment plans and reasons to return. In part 1 of this podcast we will run through Pathophysiology How patients present Guidelines Treatment Salbutamol Ipratropium Steroids Magnesium Part 2 will be out shortly, we hope you enjoy the episode and would love to hear your feedback! Simon, Rob & James References & Further Reading BTS Asthma Guidelines 2016 Intravenous or nebulised magnesium sulphate versus standard therapy for severe acute asthma (3Mg trial): a double-blind, randomised controlled trial. Goodacre S. Lancet Respir Med. 2013 Detection of pneumothoraces in patients with multiple blunt trauma: use and limitations of eFAST. Sauter TC. Emerg Med J. 2017 Chest wall thickness and decompression failure: A systematic review and meta-analysis comparing anatomic locations in needle thoracostomy. Laan DV. Injury. 2016 TheResusRoom; Needle Thoracostomy podcast TheResusRoom; BTS Asthma Guidelines 2016 podcast LITFL; Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) and asthma Intensiveblog; Asthma mechanical Ventilation Pitfalls BestBets; In a severe Exacerbation of asthma can Ketamine be used to avoid the need for mechanical ventilation in adults?