The Scary Side Effect of Using Inhalers You Need to Know About If you're an older adult, and you use an inhaler to deal with asthma or COPD, you may be putting yourself at risk for this scary infection, according to science. ( courtecy;- Reader's Digest ) BY LAUREN CAHN
The Scary Side Effect of Using Inhalers You Need to Know About
If you're an
older adult, and you use an inhaler to deal with asthma or COPD, you may be
putting yourself at risk for this scary infection, according to science.
( courtecy;- Reader's Digest )
BY LAUREN
CAHN
(LAUREN CAHN
FOR READER'S DIGEST )
Using
inhalers to deliver steroids (to deal with lung conditions) has long been
associated with impairing the immune system’s ability to fight lung infections.
Earlier this year, a study specifically tied inhaler use by young asthma
patients under 35 years of age to an increased risk of pneumonia. Now, a brand
new study suggests that inhaler use by older asthma and COPD patients could
raise the risk of another serious lung infection—a type of tuberculosis that is
notoriously difficult to treat and resistant to a number of common antibiotics.
The study,
which was published in the academic journal, the European Respiratory Journal,
was led by Sarah Brode, PhD, assistant professor of medicine at the University
of Toronto, Canada. Using existing data collected on 417,494 people aged 66 and
older in Ontario, Canada, Dr. Brode’s team discoveredpatients using the
corticosteroid, budesonide.
All told,
the chances of contracting NTB were twice as high for elderly people who were
using inhalers; the longer they used the inhaler, the greater their risk. Since
NBT can be debilitating—and even fatal—Dr. Brode and her team of researchers
believe that the time is ripe for clinicians to reconsider the use of inhalers
in some patients—particularly older patients with COPD.
“Steroid
inhalers are critical treatments for managing asthma symptoms,” Dr. Brode told
EurekAlert, but “they are less important in the management of COPD.” She suggests
that inhalers may not actually be the best treatment for COPD patients,
particularly those that have already had an inhaler-related infection and may
be more prone to them. Dr. Brode hopes that clinicians will use the information
from the study to reconsider the potential benefits versus harms associated
with the use of steroid inhalers.
Patients who
are currently using an inhaler should discuss the benefits and risks with their
clinicians. In the meantime, Dr. Brode and her colleagues are continuing to
study the same group of patients to determine what treatments might work best
for those diagnosed with NTB.
Did you know
that asthma could be made more manageable through dietary changes?
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