Comment by maccard

Comment by maccard 2 days ago

6 replies

> But when I was an infant -- which is not that long ago, parents were advised otherwise

Medicine is wild. Lots of things that were taken as gospel even 15 years ago have been completely flipped on their head. The NHS massively changed their advice last year on asthma treatment and it’s basically the opposite of what they said before. We’ve seen the same with musculoskeletal injuries, nerve injuries and just general recovery.

whatevermom 2 days ago

Sorry, but what was the change? Adding corticoid inhalers when treating an asthma episode? Curious since I have asthma and didn’t hear about this change yet.

  • maccard 2 days ago

    The short of it was that they decided salbutamol was overprescribed and shouldn’t be given to anyone who isn’t taking a corticosteroid inhaler at the same time. The advice has changed from “if you feel like you need your blue inhaler take it” to “your asthma should be managed by your corticosteroid dose, and if it’s not you should adjust”. Obviously not suitable for everyone but for people like my dad it got him from using his reliever once a week to not having an active prescription for it anymore.

    • jmole 2 days ago

      That was a worldwide change after they figured out long acting beta agonists were basically killing people because they don’t treat the underlying inflammation like inhaled corticosteroids do.

      • maccard 2 days ago

        Yeah that doesn’t surprise me - I just don’t have enough knowledge of outside the UK to know if it was advised elsewhere. Anecdotally, my breathing is so much better since I’ve adjusted to the correct dose and never missing one, I’ve gone from needing a reliever with me at all times to not using it once in a year.

      • wbl 2 days ago

        Shit I should talk to my doctor again. Although probably for exercises induced things might be a little different.

        • maccard 2 days ago

          Very possibly, although I wouldn’t be surprised if the advice has changed. Asthma is an inflammation of the lungs and the learnings seem to be that any inflammation is bad, so we want to prevent inflammation rather than respond to it.

          Definitely worth a conversation!