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Diagnosing and Staging Asthma* Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the National Asthma Education and Prevention Progam (NAEPP) 2002 Update

Diagnosing and Staging Asthma* Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the

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Page 1: Diagnosing and Staging Asthma* Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the

Diagnosing and Staging Asthma*

Cyril Grum, M.D.Department of Internal Medicine

*Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the National Asthma Education and Prevention Progam (NAEPP) 2002 Update

Page 2: Diagnosing and Staging Asthma* Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the

First, make the correct diagnosis

1) episodic symptoms of airway obstruction present

2) airflow obstruction present and is at least partially reversible

3) alternative diagnoses excluded

Elements of a diagnosis of asthma:

Page 3: Diagnosing and Staging Asthma* Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the

Symptoms suggesting asthma

• Cough• An attack, or recurrent attacks, of wheezing• Shortness of breath or chest tightness• Nocturnal cough• Exercise-induced cough or wheezing• Onset of symptoms after exposure to airborne allergens or

other stimuli• History of persistent respiratory tract infections• Conditions associated with asthma (e.g., nasal polyps, rhinitis,

atopic dermatitis, etc.)

Page 4: Diagnosing and Staging Asthma* Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the

Classification by asthma severity

(from MMWR March 28, 2003 / 52(RR06);1-8)Refer to document “Normal PEF tables.pdf” for normal values

Page 5: Diagnosing and Staging Asthma* Cyril Grum, M.D. Department of Internal Medicine *Based on the University of Michigan Guidelines for Clinic Care and the

Home monitoring of Peak Expiratory Flow (PEF)

• Green Zone (80-100% of personal best) – “all clear” no change in therapy; if asymptomatic for a

prolonged period, consider reduction in medication with monitoring.

• Yellow Zone (50-80% of personal best) – “caution” suboptimal control or early exacerbation.

• Red Zone (< 50% of personal best) – “alert” initiate more intense treatment , often a course of

steroids.