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Home arrow Information Papers arrow 3 Asthma and Pain Relievers
Introduction Print E-mail

Asthma is a common condition affecting 10% of adults and approximately 20% of children in Australia. However, asthma is not a homogenous entity, and many patterns and subtypes of asthma exist. Patterns may relate to

  • frequency of symptoms (infrequent or frequent, episodic or persistent) or
  • season (perennial versus seasonal asthma).

Subtypes of asthma also exist according to precipitating factors such as

  • allergy (atopic versus non-atopic asthma),
  • work exposure (occupational asthma),
  • exertion (exercise-induced asthma) and
  • infection (viral-induced asthma).

Asthma may also be classified according to

  • severity (mild, moderate, severe, brittle or difficult) and
  • response to treatment (steroid sensitive or resistant).

A certain pattern or subtype may occur as a predominant feature of an individual’s asthma, but significant overlap of patterns or subtypes can occur. For example, in children the most common pattern is infrequent episodic asthma associated with respiratory tract infections, but this may co-exist with exercise-induced or seasonal asthma.

Key messages

  • Aspirin-induced asthma (AIA) is a distinct clinical entity.
  • The development of AIA does not depend on a person having had previous exposure to aspirin or NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs)
  • If a patient is already on regular aspirin or NSAIDs for other reasons, the diagnosis of AIA is very unlikely, and the medication should not be stopped.
  • Aspirin-sensitive individuals may also be sensitive to paracetamol at high dose.
  • Aspirin should not be used in children or adolescents under 16 years of age with febrile illness because of the association with Reye’s syndrome.1
  • Both paracetamol and ibuprofen appear safe in most children, with no convincing evidence that either is more effective or harmful.

 

Content Updated March 2005

Last Updated ( Thursday, 19 February 2009 )
 
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