| Literature DB >> 33686986 |
Raja Dhar1, Virendra Singh2, J K Samaria3, Sundeep Salvi4, Deepak Talwar5.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33686986 PMCID: PMC8104329 DOI: 10.4103/lungindia.lungindia_699_20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lung India ISSN: 0970-2113
Asthma Assessment Tool
| Clinical features | Asthma more likely | Asthma less likely |
|---|---|---|
| The patient has two or more of these symptoms: | √ | |
| Wheeze (most sensitive and specific symptom of asthma) | ||
| Breathlessness | ||
| Chest tightness | ||
| Cough | √ | |
| The symptom pattern is as follows | ||
| Typically worse at night or in the early morning | ||
| Provoked by exercise, cold air, allergen exposure, irritants, viral infections, beta blockers, aspirin, or other NSAIDs | ||
| Recurrent or seasonal | ||
| Began in childhood | √ | |
| The patient has a history of atopic disorder or family history of asthma | ||
| Widespread wheeze is heard on chest auscultation | √’ | |
| Symptoms are rapidly relieved by inhaled SABA | √ | |
| PEF variability is >15% over time (highest-lowest PEF/mean), >15%; the greater the variability, the greater the probability | √ | |
| The patient has chronic productive cough in the absence of wheeze or breathlessness | √ | |
| There is an absence of wheeze when symptomatic | √ | |
| The patient shows normal PEF when symptomatic | √ | |
| The symptoms have begun later in life, particularly in people who smoke | √ | |
| PEF variability is <15% over time (the lesser the variability, the lower the probability) | √ | |
| The patient does not respond to a trial of asthma treatment | √ |
SABA: Short-acting beta2-agonist, PEF: Peak expiratory flow, NSAIDs: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs