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[A pregnant woman with severe asthma effectively treated by inhalational lidocaine therapy]. | LitMetric

We report a case of a pregnant woman with severe asthma that was not controlled with ordinary medications but was effectively treated by inhalational lidocaine treatment. The case was a 27-year-old woman who had been repeatedly hospitalized due to acute asthma since her infancy. The patient had an episode of asthma attack caused by the use of aspirin. The daily medication for controlling her asthma included 1.5mg betamethasone. In February, 2004, she was hospitalized because of asthma exacerbation during her 11th week of pregnancy. Despite intensive treatments including repetition of inhaled beta2-agonist and anti-cholinergic drugs, intravenous injection of betamethasone and theophylline, and a leukotriene receptor-antagonist, no obvious improvement in severe cough, wheeze, or hypoxemia was observed for more than 3 weeks. Then inhalational lidocaine was introduced according to the method described by Mayo Clinic, USA. Namely, following inhalation of beta2-agonist, 40 to 100mg lidocaine was given via an ultrasonic nebulizer 5 times a day. Interestingly, symptoms such as wheezing or cough and also her hypoxemia dramatically improved following this treatment and reduction of systemic corticosteroid became possible. Finally, she was delivered of a girl by caesarean section. Nebulized lidocaine treatment may be an useful option as supplementary treatment for refractory asthma especially in pregnant cases.

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