Louisville
Goals of Therapy
Asthma Action Plan
Control Medications

  - Corticosteroids

  - Non-Steroidal Anti-      Inflammatory

  - Theophylline

Prevention Medications

  - Leukotriene Modifiers

  - Long-Acting Beta2-Agonists

Rescue Medications

  - Short-Acting Beta2-Agonists

  - Anticholinergics

Peak Flow
Inhalers

  - Proper Spacer Usage

 

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Long-Acting Beta2-Agonists

Long-acting beta2-agonists help prevent asthma symptoms by relaxing the smooth muscles around the airways. Unlike control medications, long-acting beta2-agonists do not reduce the swelling in the airways themselves, but instead prevent bronchospasm by keeping the airway muscles relaxed. One dose of a long-acting beta2-agonists will be effective for about 12 hours. Inhaled long-acting beta2-agonists are often used to prevent exercise-induced asthma.

Types of Long-Acting Beta2-Agonists

There are two ways patients may take long-acting beta2-agonists:

Inhaled long-acting beta2-agonists -- Salmeterol (Serevent®, Serevent Diskus®) is an inhaled form of long-acting beta2-agonists that begins to take effect one to two hours after administration. It is often used in conjunction with control anti-inflammatory medications and has been shown to have positive effects on quality of life. Inhaled long-acting beta2-agonists are often used for exercise-induced asthma.

Oral long-acting beta2-agonists -- Albuterol (Proventil Repetab®, Volmax®) is taken orally and begins to take effect about 30 minutes after ingestion. It has a peak action at three to four hours and a span of 12 hours. The oral forms of long-acting beta2-agonists are not often prescribed, as there may be additional side effects such as insomnia and jitters.

Side Effects of Long-Acting Beta2-Agonists

Long-acting beta2-agonists speed the cardiovascular system so users may experience increased heartbeat, muscle tremors or cramps, anxiety, and/or headaches. The side effects from salmeterol are less common than the long-acting oral albuterol preparations.

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