Non-invasive Ventilation vs. Standard Therapy for Children Hospitalized With an Acute Exacerbation of Asthma
Asthma Acute, Asthma in Children

About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Asthma Acute
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- 2-18 years old
- Clinical diagnosis of acute asthma exacerbation (respiratory rate greater than WHO's age-dependent criteria, a history of similar previous episodes and wheezing heard on auscultation by an experienced physician)
- PRAM score of 8 or more after 2 hours post-steroid administration
- Parents willing and able to sign consent
- Children over the age of 6 willing to provide assent
Exclusion Criteria:
- Clinical suspicion of bacterial pneumonia: focal crackles or bronchial breathing, and/or major chest x-ray findings.
- Impending respiratory failure at presentation requiring direct PICU admission
- Any contraindication to BiPAP use including altered mental status, recent bowel surgery, intractable vomiting, inability to protect airway, pneumothorax.
- Receiving maintenance dose of oral steroid at time of hospital admission
- History of serious unrelated illness such as congenital heart disease or bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Active Comparator
Experimental
Experimental
Conventional asthma therapy.
Non-invasive ventilation (CPAP).
Non-invasive ventilation (BiPAP)
Bilevel Positive Airway Pressure group(BiPAP). BiPAP settings at 15/5 cm H2O by face mask with background rate 10 to 15/min. Standard steroid dose plus hourly salbutamol and oxygen to keep SaO2 > 92%.
Continuous Positive Airway Pressure group (CPAP). CPAP settings at 8 to 10 cm H2O. Standard steroid dose plus hourly salbutamol and oxygen to keep SaO2 > 92%.
Standard steroid dose, hourly salbutamol, oxygen as needed, nebulized ipratropium q 6 hrly, magnesium sulfate 50 mg/kg IV (4 doses q 6 hrly), loading dose of aminophylline 6 mg/kg IV if no progress.