| Literature DB >> 23984095 |
Abstract
The number of people with asthma continues to grow around the world, and asthma remains a poorly controlled disease despite the availability of management guidelines and highly effective medication. Patient noncompliance with therapy is a major reason for poor asthma control. Patients fail to comply with their asthma regimen for a wide variety of reasons, but incorrect use of inhaler devices is amongst the most common. The pressurised metered-dose inhaler (pMDI) is still the most frequently used device worldwide, but many patients fail to use it correctly, even after repeated tuition. Breath-actuated inhalers are easier to use than pMDIs. The rationale behind inhaler choice should be evidence based rather than empirical. When choosing an inhaler device, it is essential that it is easy to use correctly, dosing is consistent, adequate drug is deposited in both central and peripheral airways, and that drug deposition is independent of airflow. Regular checking of inhalation technique is crucial, as correct inhalation is one of the cornerstones of successful asthma management.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23984095 PMCID: PMC3747606 DOI: 10.1155/2013/102418
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Allergy ISSN: 2090-553X
Major components, advantages, and disadvantages of inhaler devices.
| Inhaler | Formulation | Metering system | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pMDI | Drug suspended or dissolved in propellant (with surfactant and cosolvent) | Metering valve and reservoir | Portable and compact | Contains propellants |
| pMDI + spacer | Easier to coordinate | Less portable than pMDI | ||
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| BA-MDI | Drug suspended in propellant | Metering valve and reservoir | Portable and compact | Contains propellants |
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| DPI | Drug blend in lactose, drug alone, drug/excipient particles | Capsules, blisters, multidose | Portable and compact | Requires a minimum inspiratory flow |
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| SMI (Respimat) | Aqueous solution or suspension | Unit dose blisters or | Portable and compact | Not breath-actuated |
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| Nebulisers | Aqueous solution or suspension | Nebule dispensed into reservoir chamber of nebulizer | May be used at any age | Jet and ultrasonic nebulisers require an outside energy source |
pMDI: pressurised metered-dose inhalers; BA-MDI: breath-actuated metered-dose inhaler; DPI: dry-powder inhaler; SMI: soft mist inhaler.
Figure 1Components of a pressurised metered-dose inhaler. Lower panels illustrate the process of aerosol generation.
Figure 2(a) The Jet open tube spacer; (b) the AeroChamber plus holding chamber; (c) the reverse-flow EZSpacer.
Figure 3Examples of dry powder inhalers. From [57].
Figure 4Components of a jet (a) and an ultrasonic (b) nebulisers. Modified from O'Callaghan and Barry [65].
Figure 5The Respimat soft mist inhaler. From [81].
Choice of inhaler devices according to the patient's inspiratory flow and ability to coordinate inhaler actuation and inhalation. Modified from Chapman et al. [90].
| Good hand-lung coordination | Poor hand-lung coordination | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Inspiratory flow > 30 L/min | Inspiratory flow < 30 L/min | Inspiratory flow > 30 L/min | Inspiratory flow < 30 L/min |
| pMDI | pMDI | pMDI + spacer | pMDI + spacer |
| BAMDI | Nebuliser | BAMDI | Nebuliser |
| DPI | SMI | DPI | SMI |
| Nebuliser | Nebuliser | ||
| SMI | SMI | ||
pMDI: pressurised metered-dose inhalers; BAMDI: breath-actuated metered-dose inhaler; DPI: dry powder inhaler; SMI: soft mist inhaler.
Figure 6Asthma therapy adjustment flow chart. From [8].