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Asthma at School

Role of the Teacher

Identify the high-risk students with asthma:

  • Previous life-threatening episodes
  • Three or more emergency room visits in one year
  • Prior hospitalizations within one year
  • History of non-adherence to asthma treatment regimen
  • Recurrent nighttime asthma requiring medications
  • Know the early warning signs
  • Have a copy of the students Asthma Action Plan in your classroom
  • Understand the student may feel tired, different from other students, anxious
    about easy access to medications, embarrassed about asthma, worried about
    activities that induce asthma

Asthma Facts

  • Asthma is the most common chronic disease of children
  • There are approximately 22 million people in the USA diagnosed with asthma
  • Asthma is the leading cause of school absenteeism in the United States
  • Children with uncontrolled asthma miss approximately 14 days of school per year
  • Asthma education is a vital component of asthma management
  • Asthma specialists (Allergist, Pulmonologist) are needed to care for mild
    persistent, moderate persistent and severe persistent asthma
  • If properly managed, people with asthma can live a happy, healthy, active life

Early Warning Signs

  • Low peak flows
  • Chronic cough (especially at night)
  • itchy, scratchy, sore throat
  • headache, stopped up head, sneezing
  • shortness of breath with exertion restlessness, more irritable,
    or at even rest
  • dark circles under the eyes
  • restlessness, more irritable
  • increased fatigue
  • tired, itchy watery, glassy eyes

Asthma Action Plan

An action plan is a treatment plan for worsening asthma. The action plan adjusts to the severity of symptoms so that students can control their asthma. People with asthma should have a treatment and management plan developed by their health care team. An Asthma Action Plan is a special road map to know how to take care of asthma each day.

When peak flow rates are:

Green Zone
  • Everything is all "go"
  • 80% or more of what your peak flow rate should be
Yellow Zone
  • Caution
  • 60 to 80% of what your peak flow rate should be
Red Zone
  • Medical emergency - peak flow rates are less than 50% of what it should be

Peak Flow Monitoring

A peak flow meter is a device that measures how well air moves in and out of the lungs. During an asthma episode, the airways become inflamed and narrowed. Many people who take asthma medicine daily use a peak flow meter several times a day.

How to Use the Peak Flow Meter

  • Set the marker to the bottom of the numeric scale.
  • Take a deep breath. Be sure you are standing up.
  • Place your lips tight around the mouthpiece.
  • Talk a big deep breath in.
  • Blow as hard and fast as possible. Blast the air out fast!
  • Note the final position of the marker. This is your peak flow rate.

Inhalers

Metered dose inhaler:

This is a small canister that contains the medication you need to control your asthma or relieve bronchospasms during an asthma episode (Advair HFA, Symbicort, ProAir HFA, Xopenex HFA, Albuterol HFA, Flovent HFA, Q-Var HFA, etc.). Proper inhaler technique must be performed to efficiently receive the medicine.

  1. Shake inhaler and place in your spacer. You may need to remove the inhaler from the canister if your spacer requires no case.
  2. Take 2 or 3 slow and deep warm up breaths.
  3. Sit up straight and be sure you are holding your head looking straight ahead.
  4. Slowly exhale.
  5. Place inhaler in your mouth, and then spray one spray.
  6. Slowly breathe in and hold your breath at least 10 seconds.
  7. Remove the spacer from your mouth and slowly exhale.
  8. Properly place spacer back into your mouth and slowly breathe in again.
  9. Hold your breath at least 10 seconds then slowly exhale.
  10. Wait 1 to 3 minutes and repeat as ordered by your doctor. (Be sure to shake your inhaler again!) Rinse your mouth after using anti-inflammatory medications.

Dry powdered inhalers:

This is medication that is in powder form. (Advair Diskus, Pulmicort Flexhaler, Asmanex, etc.)

  1. Breathe out slowly.
  2. Put your mouth on the mouthpiece.
  3. Take a big deep breath in real fast.
  4. Hold your breath for 10 seconds.
  5. Blow out slowly.

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Itchy Eyes

Have your eyes been itchy and driving you crazy? It might not be what you think it is. Allergic conjunctivitis with hay fever, dry eye, pink eye or blepharitis could lead to wrong treatment and side effects.

With an estimated 50 million white blood “mast” cells, the eye can sense irritants and release histamine and other substances to defeat the irritants. Histamine stimulates eye nerve endings which irritates the eyes causing the itch.

Approximately 50 million people in the U.S. have allergies. Some are allergic to environmental triggers but the majority experience symptoms when grass, pollens and mold are in the air. Common allergens include pollen, dust mites, ragweed, mold, pet dander, perfumes, smoke and some fragrances or cosmetic ingredients.

When allergies target the eyes, the condition can be miserable. Eye conjunctivitis may get treated as part of a nasal allergy or it can be mistaken for other serious conditions like infectious conjunctivitis also known as pink eye, dry eye disease, blepharitis (inflammation of the eyelids), herpes virus or keratitis (corneal ulcer).

Making these distinctions is critical to ensuring the proper treatment is diagnosed, to quickly reduce the symptoms and reduce the potential risk of harm to the eyes. The American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI) warns that extended use of some nasal allergy medications can leave allergic eyes drier and even more irritated.

Usually if the eyes are itchy and watery, it’s probably an allergy with intense itching with tearing and redness.

Seasonal Allergic Conjunctivitis

Most of the eye allergies in the U.S. are seasonal conjunctivitis occurring in the spring, summer and fall. Symptoms include dark under the eye circles, light sensitivity and puffy eyelids.

Perennial Allergic Conjunctivitis

This condition is where eye allergies occur year-round but commonly caused by household/workplace irritants, dust mites, mold and pet dander. The symptoms are the same as seasonal conjunctivitis but usually less severe.

Vernal Keratoconjunctivitis

This year-round condition and worsen during pollen seasons and targets boys, young men, and people with asthma or eczema. Symptoms include the feeling of something in your eye and light sensitivity.

Atopic Keratoconjunctivitis

Another year-round atopic (sensitive to allergens) keratoconjunctivitis, this strikes older men who have allergic dermatitis (an immune reaction in the skin). Symptoms are eye burning and a thick mucus that accumulates on eyelids overnight.

Contact Allergic Conjunctivitis

Direct contact with potential allergens such as eye drops with preservatives can lead to this reaction. Symptoms can also cause discomfort wearing contact lenses and mucus discharge.

Giant Papillary Conjunctivitis

This severe condition leads to fluid sacs (papules) forming in the upper eyelid lining. Doctors can see them by turning the lids inside out. Other symptoms include blurry vision from mucus discharge, foreign body sensation, discomfort wearing contacts and a sense that contacts are moving, puffy or droopy eyelids.

What else could it be other than an eye allergy?

Pain in the eye or diminished vision are serious symptoms not typical for allergies. Dry Eye Disease (DED) allergy and DED are very similar. Pink eye causes red, painful eyes indicating infection of inflamed conjunctiva. Pink eye is very contagious and usually begins in one eye and generates a sticky secretion that coats the lashes. A swollen lymph not by the ear may also appear.

Pollen clogged tear grands can resemble blepharitis, a disorder of the eyelid’s oil producing glands. It can almost always be infectious and symptoms include irritation, redness, flaky eyelid skin and crusted lashes.

Karatitis is the inflammation of the cornea, and symptoms include redness, pain, watering, blurry or decreased vision and rarely itchiness. Herpes eye disease can lead to pain, tearing, redness, light sensitivity, and a skin rash or sore near the eye. Observation or special blood tests can confirm this disease.

Other itchy conditions include contact dermatitis, atopic eczema and psoriasis all have itching on the eyelid or the skin around the eye.

Prevention

  • Avoid a known allergen
  • Protect eyes with sunglasses, visored hats and swimming goggles
  • Wash hands when coming indoors (especially after handling animals)
  • Wash your face to clean off allergens
  • Soothe eyes with a cold compress
  • Try preservative free tear substitutes
  • Consider mite-proof bedding
  • Wash sheets and blankets in hot water weekly
  • Check for and eliminate mold by regularly cleaning the areas of your home where moisture may accumulate (base of the toilets, closets, mudrooms, HVAC filers, water filters, windowsills and gutters
  • Use air conditioning in your car and in your home
  • Leave your shoes at the door

Avoidance

  • Eye drops with herbal extracts
  • Eye products using preservatives
  • Window fans that draw in allergens
  • Indoor humidity exceeding 50 to 50 percent to discourage mold
  • Dry dusting or sweeping floors and spreading allergens
  • Wearing contact lenses too long
  • Rubbing eyes

If you think you might have an eye allergy, discuss this with your OAAC provider. There are many types of drugs and treatments available. Your OAAC allergist can find the right mix of medication and treatment to defeat the eye allergy itch.

The post Itchy Eyes appeared first on Oklahoma Allergy and Asthma Clinic.

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