Re: Help for my asthmatic patient!
As someone who suffers from asthma too, I've learned lots of tricks over the years to help both myself and my patients when breathing treatments aren't enough.
One thing that helps is positioning. When your patient is struggling to breathe, place the bedside table over the bed at a comfortable height and put a pillow on it. Encourage the patient to rest her head and arms on the table, a position that helps to expand the rib cage. I've seen lots of people who'd been unable to sleep for days during an asthma attack, rest comfortably and fall asleep in this position.
Another trick is to give LOTS of fluids, preferably warm fluids, which help thin secretions and rehydrates the patient---struggling to breathe tends to dry us out pretty quickly. Warm fluids also dilate the air passages, especially if they contain a little caffeine which is a mild bronchodilator. Ice cold drinks, on the other hand, tend to make the airways more twitchy, and soda is the worst thing you can drink during an asthma attack since the bubbles cause gas, which distends the stomach and thus compresses the lungs.
Also, you should teach the patient to use pursed-lip breathing, which is like blowing out a birthday candle, only you have them exhale very slowly and deliberately. This helps to control hyperventilation and the associated anxiety, balance CO2 levels, and reinflate the alveoli.
And if all this fails and your patient is STILL in distress, check her SpO2 levels and nail beds, listen to the lungs, and note any retractions. Sometimes asthma patients require continuous nebs, or more frequent treatments than every 2-4 hours; also, you can ask the patient's doctor for a mild anxiolytic such as Ativan, which can decrease the anxiety without depressing respirations too much.
Hope this is helpful to you.
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