Conference Coverage

When and how to suspect asthma misdiagnosis


 

REPORTING FROM ACP INTERNAL MEDICINE

In the setting of low to-moderate clinical suspicion of asthma plus no demonstrable obstruction on spirometry, Dr. Happel recommends moving on to bronchial hyperreactivity testing via a methacholine challenge.

“The beauty of a methacholine challenge is that is has a high negative predictive value to help exclude the diagnosis of asthma, particularly in people who are having symptoms suggestive of asthma,” Dr. Happel explained. “If it takes more than 8 mg/mL of methacholine to elicit a 20% or greater decrease in FEV1, it’s probably something else. It’s not a particularly specific test, though; you can get false positives from a methacholine challenge.”

Pages

Recommended Reading

Promoting Quality Asthma Care in Hospital Emergency Departments: Past, Present, and Future Efforts in Florida
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Asthma Self-Management in Women
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Psychological Stress Interventions and Asthma: Therapeutic Considerations
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Capturing the Impact of Language Barriers on Asthma Management During an Emergency Department Visit
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Good definitions, research lacking for COPD-asthma overlap
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management