Abstract
Eight patients with chronic severe asthma, poorly controlled by conventional doses of inhaled bronchodilator, were treated with high-dose inhaled terbutaline (4 mg four times daily), via either wet nebulisation of terbutaline respirator solution, or by tube-spacer aerosol, using cannisters delivering 1 mg terbutaline per metered dose. All patients improved objectively and subjectively on these higher dosage regimens during both day and night. A trial of high-dose inhaled beta2 sympathomimetic therapy should be considered in any patient with chronic severe asthma who fails to obtain benefit from standard doses of inhaled bronchodilator.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Prior, J. G., Nowell, R. V., & Cochrane, G. M. (1982). High-dose inhaled terbutaline in the management of chronic severe asthma: Comparison of wet nebulisation and tube-spacer delivery. Thorax, 37(4), 300–303. https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.37.4.300
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.