Asthmatic crisis – Basic Information

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An asthmatic crisis, also known as an asthma attack, is a sudden and serious worsening of breathing difficulties that can quickly become life-threatening if not treated promptly. Understanding the warning signs and knowing how to respond can make a critical difference in outcomes for people living with asthma.

Understanding Asthmatic Crisis and Its Global Impact

Asthma is a chronic lung disease that affects the airways, making breathing difficult for millions of people worldwide. When someone with asthma experiences a sudden worsening of symptoms that doesn’t respond well to their usual medications, this is called an asthmatic crisis or severe asthma attack. During such an episode, the airways become severely narrowed, swollen, and filled with mucus, making it extremely difficult to breathe.[1]

In 2019, asthma affected an estimated 262 million people globally and caused 455,000 deaths. The majority of asthma-related deaths occur in low- and lower-middle-income countries, where under-diagnosis and under-treatment remain significant challenges.[4] In the United States alone, the prevalence of asthma has been nearly 8 percent, with slightly higher rates in children. Approximately 4 percent of Americans experience an asthma attack each year.[7]

Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases among children, though it can affect people of all ages. It represents a major noncommunicable disease that can significantly interfere with daily activities, work, and school attendance when not properly controlled.[4]

What Causes Asthma and Asthmatic Crisis

Experts are not entirely certain what causes asthma, but it appears to involve a combination of factors. The condition develops when the airways become chronically inflamed and overly sensitive to certain triggers. This chronic inflammation is a key feature that makes the airways react more strongly to various substances or situations that wouldn’t bother most people.[1]

While the exact cause remains unclear, researchers have identified several factors that increase the likelihood of developing asthma. Living with allergies or eczema (a skin condition that causes inflammation and itching) puts people at higher risk. Exposure to toxins, fumes, or secondhand smoke—especially early in life—also increases asthma risk. Having a biological parent with allergies or asthma raises the chances of developing the condition. Additionally, children who experienced repeated respiratory infections, such as RSV (respiratory syncytial virus), are more likely to develop asthma later.[2]

An asthmatic crisis specifically occurs when the inflammation and narrowing of airways becomes so severe that standard home treatments no longer provide relief. This can happen over a period of hours or days, or sometimes very quickly over just minutes.[3]

Risk Factors for Developing an Asthmatic Crisis

Certain people with asthma face higher risks of experiencing a severe asthma attack. One of the most common risk factors is not knowing how to properly use inhalers. There are many steps involved in using these devices correctly, and it’s easy to miss one. If patients don’t time their breathing just right or skip a step, they might not get all of the medication to their lungs where it’s needed.[3]

Another significant risk factor is when patients or their healthcare providers underestimate how severe their asthma actually is. This can lead to being prescribed medications that aren’t strong enough or at doses that are too low to control the condition properly. Some patients may be unable or unwilling to use the medications they need, or they might not understand when they’re supposed to take them to prevent severe symptoms.[3]

Additional risk factors for experiencing a subsequent emergency department visit after an asthma attack include being younger than two years old, being of black race or Hispanic ethnicity, having persistent asthma, having public health insurance, lower quality-of-life scores related to asthma, and increased use of healthcare services during the previous year.[16]

⚠️ Important
People with asthma should never rely solely on quick-relief inhalers without also having a controller medication if prescribed by their doctor. If you find yourself needing to use your quick-relief inhaler more than two days a week for symptom relief (not counting use before exercise), this is a warning sign that your asthma is not well controlled and you should see your healthcare provider.[12]

Recognizing the Symptoms of an Asthmatic Crisis

The symptoms of asthma generally include shortness of breath, a whistling sound when breathing out called wheezing, chest tightness or pain, and coughing. These symptoms can vary from person to person and may occur only at certain times, such as during exercise or when exposed to specific triggers. Some people experience symptoms all the time, while others have infrequent asthma attacks.[1]

When symptoms worsen into an asthmatic crisis, they become more severe and frightening. It can feel like someone is sitting on your chest or like there’s a cloud in your lungs. Breathing becomes extremely difficult, the chest tightens significantly, and breathing quickens. Some people describe it as feeling like you’re drowning in air.[9]

During a severe asthma attack, symptoms can include obvious difficulty breathing, the inability to speak a full sentence in one breath, and visible tugging of the skin between the ribs or at the base of the neck as the person struggles to breathe. There may be intense coughing or wheezing, and reliever medications may not last as long as usual.[17]

Life-threatening asthma signs represent a medical emergency requiring immediate attention. These include severe difficulty breathing, inability to speak more than a few words, gasping for air, confusion or drowsiness, bluish coloring of the lips or fingernails (indicating lack of oxygen), and an extremely rapid heartbeat. In very severe cases, wheezing may actually stop because so little air is moving through the airways.[3]

Prevention Strategies for Asthma and Asthmatic Crisis

While asthma cannot be cured, it can be controlled, and many severe attacks can be prevented with proper management. The foundation of asthma prevention is working closely with a healthcare provider to develop a personalized asthma action plan. This written plan outlines which medications to take daily, how to recognize when asthma is worsening, and what steps to take during an attack.[1]

Identifying and avoiding personal asthma triggers is crucial for prevention. Common triggers include allergens such as pollen, dust mites, pet dander, and cockroaches; respiratory infections like colds and flu; smoke from cigarettes, fires, or other sources; cold air; exercise (particularly intense physical activity and cold-weather sports); strong chemicals or smells like perfumes, cleaning products, and air fresheners; stress (both physical and emotional); and air pollution from factory emissions, car exhaust, or wildfire smoke.[2]

Taking daily controller medications as prescribed is essential for preventing asthmatic crises. These medications, often inhaled corticosteroids (medicines that reduce inflammation when breathed into the lungs), help reduce airway inflammation and make the lungs less reactive to triggers. Even when feeling well, continuing these medications as directed helps prevent future attacks.[12]

Environmental control measures can significantly reduce asthma triggers in the home. This includes keeping pets with fur out of bedrooms if animal fur triggers symptoms, removing dust and mold, using air filters, washing bedding in hot water weekly, and keeping windows closed when pollen or air pollution levels are high. At work, avoiding or minimizing exposure to occupational triggers is important, as even low levels of workplace allergens can trigger symptoms in people with occupational asthma.[20]

Regular check-ups with a healthcare provider, at least once a year, help ensure asthma remains controlled. These visits should include reviewing medication techniques, updating the asthma action plan, and checking that medications are working properly. Vaccinations, including annual flu shots, are also recommended as respiratory infections can trigger severe asthma attacks.[6]

How Asthma Changes Normal Body Function

In healthy lungs, air flows freely through airways that branch like a tree, becoming smaller as they reach deeper into the lungs. The airways are lined with smooth muscle and a protective layer of cells that produce a normal amount of mucus to trap particles and keep airways moist. When someone has asthma, chronic inflammation develops in these airways, causing several problematic changes in how they function.[1]

The inflammation causes the inside walls of the airways to become swollen and irritated. This swelling narrows the space through which air can flow, making it harder to breathe. The smooth muscles surrounding the airways become overly sensitive and tend to tighten or constrict in response to triggers—a process called bronchospasm. This tightening further narrows the airways and makes breathing even more difficult.[2]

The cells lining the airways produce excess mucus in response to inflammation. This thick, sticky mucus clogs the already narrowed airways, creating even more obstruction to airflow. During an asthmatic crisis, all three of these problems—inflammation, muscle constriction, and excess mucus—occur simultaneously and become severe. The result is that very little air can move in and out of the lungs.[2]

When airways are severely blocked, the body cannot get enough oxygen to vital organs and tissues, a condition called hypoxia. At the same time, carbon dioxide—a waste product that normally gets exhaled—can build up in the blood, leading to hypercapnia (too much carbon dioxide). If left untreated, these conditions can lead to respiratory failure, where the lungs can no longer adequately exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide. This is why status asthmaticus, the medical term for a severe asthma attack that doesn’t respond to standard treatments, is considered a life-threatening emergency.[3]

The chronic inflammation in asthma can also cause long-term changes to the airways over time, a process called airway remodeling. This involves thickening of the airway walls, increased muscle mass around the airways, and changes to the structure of airway tissue. These changes can make asthma harder to control and may lead to some degree of permanent airway narrowing.[5]

⚠️ Important
During an asthmatic crisis, inflammation and mucus production are often the main drivers of hard-to-control symptoms, rather than just muscle tightening. This is why systemic corticosteroids (anti-inflammatory medications given by mouth or injection) are crucial for treating severe attacks, and why quick-relief inhalers alone may not be sufficient.[5]

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Asthmatic crisis

  • Long-term safety and effectiveness study of verekitug injections in adults with severe asthma who completed the VALIANT trial

    Not recruiting

    Investigated diseases:
    Bulgaria Czechia Germany Italy Poland Spain
  • Study on the Effects of Verekitug (UPB-101) for Adults with Severe Asthma

    Not recruiting

    Investigated diseases:
    Bulgaria Czechia Germany Italy Poland Spain

References

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/asthma/symptoms-causes/syc-20369653

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/6424-asthma

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/status-asthmaticus

https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/asthma

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK526070/

https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/asthma/

https://www.cdc.gov/asthma/about/index.html

https://www.redcross.org/take-a-class/resources/learn-first-aid/asthma-attack?srsltid=AfmBOorfffxVdUbU00Tiah51nz7Q84gIJtSYKt7ZGes86LcOKNvTELpj

https://acaai.org/asthma/symptoms/asthma-attack/

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/asthma-attack/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20354274

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/asthma/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20369660

https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/asthma/treatment-action-plan

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/6424-asthma

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6676463/

https://aafa.org/asthma/asthma-treatment/

https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2011/0701/p40.html

https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/health/conditionsandtreatments/asthma-emergency-first-aid

https://www.merckmanuals.com/professional/pulmonary-disorders/asthma-and-related-disorders/treatment-of-acute-asthma-exacerbations

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/296301-treatment

https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/asthma/living-with

https://allergyasthmanetwork.org/what-is-asthma/lifestyle-changes-to-manage-asthma/

https://www.redcross.org/take-a-class/resources/learn-first-aid/asthma-attack?srsltid=AfmBOoqiy4y5_nXwcyJ2W1o77JLBE6etY97OnEo_iLVKTEN-umO4SDGF

https://www.who.int/news-room/feature-stories/detail/dont-let-asthma-hold-you-back-5-ways-to-make-sure-that-you-are-in-control-of-your-asthma

https://www.cdc.gov/asthma/emergency/index.html

https://www.lung.org/lung-health-diseases/lung-disease-lookup/asthma/managing-asthma/reduce-asthma-triggers

https://medlineplus.gov/diagnostictests.html

https://www.questdiagnostics.com/

https://www.healthdirect.gov.au/diagnostic-tests

https://www.who.int/health-topics/diagnostics

https://www.nibib.nih.gov/science-education/science-topics/rapid-diagnostics

https://www.yalemedicine.org/clinical-keywords/diagnostic-testsprocedures

https://www.health.harvard.edu/diagnostic-tests-and-medical-procedures

FAQ

What is the difference between regular asthma and an asthmatic crisis?

Asthma is a chronic lung condition that causes ongoing inflammation in the airways, making them sensitive to triggers. You can usually manage regular asthma with daily medications and quick-relief inhalers. An asthmatic crisis, also called status asthmaticus or acute severe asthma, is a severe asthma attack that doesn’t get better with standard home treatments like quick-relief inhalers. It’s a medical emergency that requires immediate professional help, as it can lead to respiratory failure if not treated promptly.[3]

How long does an asthmatic crisis last?

The duration of an asthmatic crisis varies depending on what triggered it and how long the airways have been inflamed. Some attacks can develop over hours or days, while others come on very quickly within minutes. Mild episodes may resolve within a few minutes with proper treatment, but more severe attacks can last from hours to days and may require hospitalization. With appropriate medical treatment including oxygen, bronchodilators, and systemic corticosteroids, symptoms can be shortened.[9]

When should I go to the emergency room for asthma?

You should seek emergency care immediately if you have severe shortness of breath that makes it difficult to speak or eat, if your reliever inhaler isn’t helping or its effects don’t last as long as usual, if you notice bluish coloring of your lips or fingernails, if you feel confused or dizzy, or if you have a very fast heart rate. If you’ve used your maximum dose of quick-relief medication and don’t feel better after 10 minutes, or if symptoms are rapidly worsening, call emergency services right away. These are signs of a life-threatening asthma attack.[3]

Can you die from an asthmatic crisis?

Yes, asthmatic crises can be fatal if not treated. Asthma caused 455,000 deaths globally in 2019. Severe attacks can lead to respiratory failure when the lungs can no longer adequately exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide, preventing vital organs from getting enough oxygen. However, most asthma deaths are preventable with proper diagnosis, appropriate treatment, and good asthma management. This is why it’s crucial to have an asthma action plan, take controller medications as prescribed, and seek immediate medical help during severe attacks.[4]

What should I do during an asthma attack at home?

If you’re having an asthma attack at home, sit upright to help your breathing and try to stay calm. Use your quick-relief (reliever) inhaler as directed—typically one puff at a time, with four breaths from a spacer for each puff. You can take up to four puffs. Wait four minutes, and if there’s no improvement, take four more puffs the same way. If breathing doesn’t return to normal or symptoms worsen, call emergency services immediately. While waiting for help, continue taking four puffs every four minutes. Do not lie down, and do not drive yourself to the hospital.[17]

🎯 Key takeaways

  • An asthmatic crisis is a severe asthma attack that doesn’t respond to standard home treatments and requires immediate medical attention to prevent respiratory failure and death.
  • Asthma affected 262 million people worldwide in 2019 and caused 455,000 deaths, with most deaths occurring in countries where access to proper asthma treatment is limited.
  • Proper inhaler technique is critical—many severe attacks could be prevented if patients knew how to correctly use their inhalers, as improper use means medication doesn’t reach the lungs.
  • Warning signs of a severe attack include inability to speak in full sentences, visible chest wall retractions, bluish lips or fingernails, confusion, and quick-relief medications not providing lasting relief.
  • During an attack, inflammation and excess mucus production are often more problematic than muscle tightening, which is why anti-inflammatory medications are crucial for severe episodes.
  • Airway inflammation can persist for days to weeks after an acute attack, requiring continued intensive treatment even after immediate symptoms improve.
  • Having an updated written asthma action plan from your doctor and reviewing it regularly can be life-saving during an emergency by providing clear instructions on what to do.
  • If you need your quick-relief inhaler more than twice a week (not counting before exercise), this signals poorly controlled asthma and you should contact your healthcare provider to adjust your treatment plan.