Abstract

Exercise induced bronchial (EIB) constriction is a common and highly specific feature of pediatric asthma and should be diagnosed with an exercise challenge test (ECT). The impact of EIB in asthmatic children's daily lives is immense, considering the effects on both physical and psychosocial development. Monitoring childhood asthma by ECT's can provide insight into daily life disease burden and the control of asthma. Current guidelines for bronchoprovocation tests restrict both the use of reliever and maintenance asthma medication before an exercise challenge to prevent false-negative testing, as both have significant acute bronchoprotective properties. However, restricting maintenance medication before an ECT may be less appropiate to evaluate EIB symptoms in daily life when a diagnosis of asthma is well established. Rigorous of maintenance medication before an ECT according to guidelines may lead to overestimation of the real, daily life asthma burden and lead to an inappropiate step-up in therapy. The protection against EIB offered by the combined acute and chronic bronchoprotective effects of maintenance medication can be properly assessed whilst maintaining them. This may aid in achieving the goal of unrestricted participation of children in daily play and sports activities with their peers without escalation of therapy. When considering a step down in medication, a strategic wash-out of maintenance medication before an ECT aids in providing objective support of potential discontinuation of maintenance medication.

Highlights

  • ASTHMA MEDICATION AND Exercise-induced bronchoconstriction (EIB)1. In addition to chronic effects, maintenance asthma medications have acute bronchoprotective effects against exercise induced bronchoconstriction (EIB)

  • Asthma is the most common chronic inflammatory disease in childhood, affecting up to 10% of all children and impairing quality of life [1, 2]

  • A strategic wash-out of maintenance medication before an exercise challenge test (ECT) can support a safe step-down in maintenance medication in children with exercise-induced bronchoconstriction

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Summary

ASTHMA MEDICATION AND EIB

1. In addition to chronic effects, maintenance asthma medications have acute bronchoprotective effects against exercise induced bronchoconstriction (EIB). 2. An Exercise Challenge Test (ECT) with continuation of daily maintenance medications represents real-life disease burden and protection against EIB and can support personalized decision making. 3. A strategic wash-out of maintenance medication before an ECT can support a safe step-down in maintenance medication in children with exercise-induced bronchoconstriction

INTRODUCTION
Reliever Medication
Recommended withholding time before challenge test *
Maintenance Medication
Establishing Asthma Diagnosis
Findings
CONCLUSION

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