Women’s Health Library
Our Health Library information does not replace the advice of a doctor. Please be advised that this information is made available to assist our patients to learn more about their health. Our providers may not see and/or treat all topics found herein.
Asthma: Overuse of Quick-Relief Medicines
Overview
Quick-relief beta2-agonists quickly reduce symptoms. For this reason, people sometimes overuse them instead of adding the slower-acting, long-term medicines. Overuse of quick-relief medicines may be harmful.
If you overuse quick-relief beta2-agonists, you may feel that your asthma is under control. But, in fact, inflammation in your airways is becoming worse. This can put you in danger of having a severe, deadly attack (status asthmaticus).
Overuse:
- May delay medical care.
- May increase your chances of having a severe asthma attack. A severe attack can be deadly.
- Can make quick-relief medicines less effective in the future.
- Treats only the early narrowing of bronchial tubes without treating long-term inflammation.
In general, you may need more long-term treatment if you are using quick-relief medicines on more than 2 days a week within a month (except before exercise). Talk to your doctor if you are using your quick-relief medicine this often. Using these medicines often may mean that your symptoms and inflammation are not well controlled.
Credits
Current as of: July 31, 2024
Current as of: July 31, 2024