
Asthma Care: Must-Know Insights for Primary Practice
These guidelines highlight the importance of multidisciplinary management and continued efforts to improve asthma care in Mexico and Latin America.
The project was led by the Mexican College of Clinical Immunology and Allergy and endorsed by 16 scientific institutions or specialty societies, which manage asthma in fields such as allergy, pulmonology, otorhinolaryngology, emergency medicine, general and family medicine, internal medicine, and pediatrics. The general coordination was carried out by Désirée Larenas-Linnemann, MD, an international expert who represents Mexico for the Global Initiative for Asthma, coordinates the International Severe Asthma Registry, and leads the Center of Excellence in Asthma and Allergy at Médica Sur Hospital in Mexico City, Mexico.
In an interview with Univadis Spain , a Medscape Network platform, Larenas-Linnemann emphasized, 'It is important to understand that asthma is an inflammatory process of the bronchial tubes.' This means that prescribing only salbutamol is insufficient, as both maintenance and rescue therapy require dual therapy: one drug to open the bronchi and another to reduce inflammation.
Another critical point concerns allergic asthma, which constitutes the majority of cases in both children and adults. In these cases, Larenas-Linnemann recommends co-management with an allergy specialist to apply immunotherapy alongside the specific treatment once symptoms are controlled.
Primary Care Challenges in Mexico
Larenas-Linnemann noted that many patients who are well treated during an asthma crisis in emergency departments often leave without essential maintenance treatment to prevent future flare-ups. 'Follow-up care is very important,' she emphasized.
Abril Daniella Alemán Ortega, DO, pediatrician at the Hospital Regional de Alta Especialidad de Zumpango, Mexico, who did not participate in drafting the guidelines, mentioned that diagnosing and managing asthma is more challenging in children than in adults. However, early management is crucial to prevent these children from developing severe respiratory issues as adults. When asked about common mistakes made by her colleagues, Alemán pointed out the misuse of pharmacologic treatment, often involving incomplete regimens or short-term use. She also noted areas for improvement in medication administration and in providing information to families.
Alemán emphasized the importance of the guidelines because they encompass everyone from primary care physicians to subspecialists involved in pediatric care. She also stressed that the primary care doctor must recognize that a patient with recurrent respiratory symptoms likely doesn't have recurrent infections, and that prescribing repeated antibiotics rarely solves the problem. 'This is a good point to review,' she concluded.
The guidelines also provide specific recommendations for diagnosing and treating asthma under less-than-ideal conditions. For example, in settings where only beclomethasone and salbutamol are available, specific strategies have been outlined for appropriate use.
10 Recommendations Based on MIA 2.0 Guidelines
When to suspect asthma. Suspecting asthma can be challenging due to the varied ways it can present, often without the classic wheezing. However, recognizing key symptoms and understanding their variations make raising suspicion straightforward. The four key signs/symptoms that suggest asthma are cough, dyspnea (shortness of breath), wheezing, and chest tightness.
If two or more of these symptoms are present, particularly with variation in time, intensity, and exacerbation with environmental factors (such as exercise, laughing or crying, temperature or humidity changes, or allergen exposure), asthma should be suspected. The likelihood of asthma increases if these symptoms are frequent or worsen at night or in the early morning.
What doesn't help in diagnosis. Chest x-rays are generally not useful for diagnosing asthma because they typically do not show changes outside of an acute asthma crisis. They are only useful for excluding alternative diagnoses. In patients with well-controlled asthma who are symptom free, spirometry results are usually normal. While spirometry with classic abnormalities confirms asthma, a normal result does not rule it out.
What helps. Clinical manifestations should be combined with respiratory function tests that demonstrate airflow obstruction, particularly during exhalation and its variability. Useful tests include spirometry before and after administering a bronchodilator, peak flow measurement over 5-15 days, oscillometry before and after bronchodilator administration, and, in rare cases, bronchial challenge tests.
When possible, especially if pulmonary function tests are inconclusive, testing for positive type 2 inflammation biomarkers is recommended because most asthma cases involve type 2 inflammation. In children younger than 5 years, pulmonary function tests are limited, and symptoms are often linked to other age-specific conditions. However, between ages 2 and 3, a subgroup of children who will have poor long-term outcomes can be identified, and by age 5, these children typically show significant reductions in lung function. A specific tool, the Asthma Predictive Index, can help predict which preschool children with wheezing will likely develop asthma. If symptoms are highly suspicious, a therapeutic trial should be performed to assess response.
After confirming the diagnosis, categorize the disease. Define the level of asthma control. The Asthma Control Test includes five simple questions about symptoms and medication use over the past 4 weeks, allowing patients to evaluate their own control. Versions are available for both adults and children.
Individualize treatment by assessing future risk, severity, phenotype, and endotype. For example, in suspected allergic asthma, skin or serum tests with allergens should be conducted to confirm sensitization.
What if a full assessment isn't possible? A positive clinical response to a therapeutic trial is a strong indication of asthma. This means symptom improvement with low-dose inhaled corticosteroids and a rapid-acting bronchodilator, administered as needed, for at least 4-6 weeks, with symptoms worsening upon discontinuation.
Avoid prescribing diets without justification. Patients with asthma and documented food allergies are at a higher risk for complications. If food allergies are suspected, a diet free of the specific allergen should only be prescribed after confirming the allergy through the presence of specific immunoglobulin E levels. Unnecessary dietary restrictions should be avoided because they can lead to nutritional imbalances.
Define medications and devices. In addition to selecting the appropriate medication — such as bronchodilators, anti-inflammatories, and biologics — it is crucial to choose the right device for drug administration based on the patient's preferences and capabilities.
It is important to note that synergistic therapy differs from combination therapy. Synergistic therapy refers to the combination of two drugs in one device, such as inhaled corticosteroids with long-acting beta-2 agonists, which theoretically offers greater efficacy than using the two separately. An example is the maintenance and reliever therapy approach, where a dual inhaler is used for both maintenance and rescue, reducing the frequency of crises. However, salbutamol-ipratropium bromide is not considered synergistic because both are bronchodilators without an anti-inflammatory component.
MIA 2.0 includes a treatment algorithm for each age group, integrating maintenance-rescue management blocks, with preferred and alternative options for each of the five treatment steps.
Educate the patient: Action plan and rescue treatment. Every asthma patient should have a written action plan outlining what to do when symptoms worsen and the risk for exacerbation arises. A key aspect of rescue treatment is that patients must always have access to an anti-inflammatory (such as a corticosteroid or, potentially, a leukotriene antagonist) and should never rely solely on short-acting beta-2 agonists. Sole use of these can lead to more frequent asthma attacks and increased mortality. For rescue treatment, budesonide-formoterol, or beclomethasone-formoterol, or salbutamol with inhaled corticosteroids in two separate devices is recommended.
Managing a patient with severe exacerbation (crisis). Assess whether the patient is experiencing a life-threatening crisis with imminent respiratory failure or has risk factors for fatal asthma. If so, initiate high-dose inhaled bronchodilators, oxygen therapy, and systemic corticosteroids immediately, and transfer the patient to a facility capable of managing a potentially fatal asthma crisis.
If a life-threatening crisis or risk factors are ruled out, evaluate the severity of the attack and determine treatment for the first 60 minutes, with reassessment at 1 hour. For patients with oxygen saturation below 94% (at sea level), administer oxygen therapy and inhaled medications via nebulization with pressurized oxygen. If the response is not favorable within an hour, and no more than 3 hours, hospitalize the patient.
During an asthma crisis, pulse oximetry and pulmonary function test values are more reliable than symptoms alone. However, these objective measures should always be incorporated into the overall clinical picture.
When to refer to a specialist.
Children and adults with recurrent respiratory symptoms but a low likelihood of asthma.
Difficulty confirming an asthma diagnosis even after a therapeutic trial with inhaled or oral corticosteroids.
Patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, particularly if treatment priorities are unclear, or if they show signs of chronic infection, hemodynamic or cardiovascular issues, or other pulmonary diseases.
Persistently uncontrolled or severe asthma with frequent exacerbations — two or more crises per year despite proper inhaler use — requiring step 4 treatment, high-dose inhaled corticosteroids, or long-term use of oral corticosteroids (corticosteroid-dependent asthma).
Risk for fatal asthma, including crises triggered by nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, aeroallergens, food allergens, or anaphylaxis. Patients with severe asthma should be treated in specialized centers with expertise in managing complex cases.
Evidence or risk for serious side effects from treatment or symptoms suggesting complications. If moderate-dose maintenance and reliever therapy does not control asthma and the dose of corticosteroid inhalers is increased, refer to a specialist if levels of exhaled nitric oxide or eosinophils are elevated.
At-risk groups, including pregnant patients, those suspected of having occupational asthma, patients who frequently utilize healthcare insurance, or those with excessive anxiety from the patient or caregiver.
In children aged 5 years or younger, if there is no clear association between symptoms and typical triggers or if there is a lack of response to treatment, delayed growth and development, early onset of symptoms, vomiting associated with respiratory symptoms outside of an asthma crisis, continuous wheezing, hypoxemia unrelated to viral illness, focal pulmonary or cardiovascular signs, clubbing of fingers, a history of hospitalization, or multiple emergency department visits for wheezing within a 12-month period.
The MIA 2.0 guidelines were endorsed by the Mexican College of Pediatric Pulmonology, Latin American Society of Respiratory Physiology, National Pulmonology Council, Mexican College of Clinical Immunology and Allergy, and several other medical societies.
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San Francisco Chronicle
2 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Mexican ranchers struggle to adapt as a tiny parasite ravages their cattle exports to the US
HERMOSILLO, Mexico (AP) — The United States' suspension of live cattle imports from Mexico hit at the worst possible time for rancher Martín Ibarra Vargas, who after two years of severe drought had hoped to put his family on better footing selling his calves across the northern border. Like his father and grandfather before him, Ibarra Vargas has raised cattle on the parched soil of Sonora, the state in northwestern Mexico that shares a long border with the United States, particularly Arizona. His family has faced punishing droughts before but has never before had to contend with the economic hit of a new scourge: the New World Screwworm, a flesh-eating parasite. U.S. agriculture officials halted live cattle crossing the border in July – the third suspension of the past eight months — due to concerns about the flesh-eating maggot which has been found in southern Mexico and is creeping north. The screwworm is a larva of the Cochliomyia hominivorax fly that can invade the tissues of any warm-blooded animal, including humans. The parasite enters animals' skin, causing severe damage and lesions that can be fatal. Infected animals are a serious threat to herds. The U.S. Department of Agriculture calls it a "devastating pest" and said in June that it poses a threat to 'our livestock industry, our economy, and our food supply chain.' It has embarked on other steps to keep it out of the United States, which eradicated it decades ago. As part of its strategy the U.S. is preparing to breed billions of sterile flies and release them in Mexico and southern Texas. The aim is for the sterile males to mate with females in the wild who then produce no offspring. The U.S. ban on live cattle also applies to horses and bison imports. It hit a ranching sector already weakened by drought and specifically a cattle export business that generated $1.2 billion for Mexico last year. This year, Mexican ranchers have exported fewer than 200,000 head of cattle, which is less than half what they historically send in the same period. For Ibarra Vargas, considered a comparatively small rancher by Sonora's beef-centric standards, the inability to send his calves across the border has made him rethink everything. The repeated bans on Mexican cows by U.S. authorities has pushed his family to branch into beekeeping, raising sheep and selling cow's milk. What he earns is just a fraction of what he earned by exporting live cattle, but he is trying to hold on through the lean times. 'Tiempos de vacas flacas" — times of the lean cows — as he calls them. 'At least it lets us continue' ranching, the 57-year-old said with a white cowboy hat perched on his head. Reinvent to survive Even as ranchers in Sonora intensify their efforts to make sure the parasitic fly never makes it into their state, they've had to seek new markets. In the past two months, they've sold more than 35,000 mature cows within Mexico at a significant loss. 'We couldn't wait any longer,' said Juan Carlos Ochoa, president of the Sonora Regional Cattle Union. Those sales, he said, came at a '35% lower price difference compared with the export value of a cow.' That's hard to stomach when beef prices in the U.S. are rising. The U.S. first suspended cattle imports last November. Since then, more than 2,258 cases of screwworm have been identified in Mexico. Treatment requires a mix of manually removing the maggots, healing the lesions on the cows and using anti-parasite medicine. There are other foreign markets, for example Japan, but selling vacuum sealed steaks across the Pacific is a dramatically different business than driving calves to U.S. feedlots. The switch is not easy. An uncertain future With his calves mooing as they ran from one end of a small corral to the other waiting to be fed, Ibarra Vargas said he still hasn't figured out how he will survive an extended period of not being able to send them to the U.S. The recent two-year drought reduced his cattle stocks and forced him to take on debt to save the small family ranch that has survived for three generations. Juan Carlos Anaya, director of Agricultural Markets Consulting Group, attributed a 2% drop in Mexico's cattle inventory last year to the drought. Anaya said Mexican ranchers who export are trying to get the U.S. to separate what happens in southern Mexico from the cattle exporting states in the north where stricter health and sanitation measures are taken, 'but the damage is already done.' 'We're running out of time,' said Ibarra Vargas, who already laments that his children are not interested in carrying on the family business. For a rancher who 'doesn't have a market or money to continue feeding his calves, it's a question of time before he says: 'you know what, this is as far as I go.'' __ Sánchez reported from Mexico City.