assessment of severe asthma in adults
Last edited 01/2020 and last reviewed 07/2022
Management of acute asthma in adults
Assessment of severe asthma
- Healthcare professionals must be aware that patients with severe asthma and one or more adverse psychosocial factors are at risk of death.
Moderate Acute asthma:
- increasing symptoms
- PEF > 50-75% best or predicted
- no features of acute severe asthma
Acute severe asthma
- Any one of:
- PEF 33-50% best or predicted
- respiratory rate >= 25/min
- heart rate >= 110/min
- inability to complete sentences in one breath
Life-threatening asthma:
- In a patient with severe asthma any one of:
- PEF < 33% best or predicted
- SpO2 < 92%
- PaO2 < 8 kPa
- 'normal' PaCO2 (4.6-6.0 kPa)
- altered conscious level
- exhaustion
- arrhythmia
- hypotension
- cyanosis
- silent chest
- poor respiratory effort
Near-fatal asthma:
- Raised PaCO2 and/or requiring mechanical ventilation with raised inflation pressures
Initial assessment of symptoms, signs and measurements
Clinical features
- severe breathlessness (including too breathless to complete sentences in
one breath), tachypnoea, tachycardia, silent chest, cyanosis or collapse
- none of these singly or together is specific and their absence does
not exclude a severe attack
- none of these singly or together is specific and their absence does
not exclude a severe attack
- PEF or FEV1
- PEF or FEV1 are useful and valid measures of airway calibre.
- PEF expressed as a % of the patient's previous best value is most useful clinically. In the absence of this, PEF as a % of predicted is a rough guide
- Pulse oximetry
- Oxygen saturation (SpO2) measured by pulse oximetry determines the
adequacy of oxygen therapy and the need for arterial blood gas (ABG) measurement.
The aim of oxygen therapy is to maintain SpO2 94-98%
- Oxygen saturation (SpO2) measured by pulse oximetry determines the
adequacy of oxygen therapy and the need for arterial blood gas (ABG) measurement.
The aim of oxygen therapy is to maintain SpO2 94-98%
- Blood gases (ABG)
- Patients with SpO2 <92% or other features of life-threatening asthma
require ABG measurement
- Patients with SpO2 <92% or other features of life-threatening asthma
require ABG measurement
- Chest X-ray
- Chest X-ray is not routinely recommended in patients in the absence
of:
- suspected pneumomediastinum or pneumothorax
- suspected consolidation
- life-threatening asthma
- failure to respond to treatment satisfactorily
- requirement for ventilation
- Chest X-ray is not routinely recommended in patients in the absence
of:
Reference:
- SIGN (July 2019). British Guideline on the management of asthma (SIGN158)