What does this drug do?
Short-acting beta 2-agonists are also called "quick relief," or
"rescue" medicines. They work fast to relax the muscles of the
airways and decrease the amount of mucus produced. They also
prevent tightening of the muscles around the airways (bronchospasm)
caused by pollens, exercise, cold air, and air pollutants.
This medicine is used to treat acute asthma attacks.
What are other names for this medicine?
Some other names for this medicine are albuterol (Proventil,
Proventil HFA, Ventolin HFA), levalbuterol (Xopenex, Xopenex HFA),
and pirbuterol (Maxair, Maxair Autohaler).
Combivent and DuoNeb contain both a short-acting beta 2-agonist
(albuterol) and an anticholinergic (ipratropium bromide).
How is it taken?
This medicine can be inhaled using:
- a nebulizer that produces a fine mist
- a metered-dose inhaler (MDI)
- Maxair Autohaler that automatically sprays the medicine when
your child inhales through the mouthpiece
- a dry powder device (Ventolin Rotacaps).
What is the usual dose?
Nebulizer: Albuterol comes in 3 ml vials or a 0.5% solution. The
most common nebulizer doses for albuterol are 1.25 mg, 2.5 mg, or 5
mg (vial) or 0.25 to .5 ml of the 0.5% solution diluted with 2 ml of
sterile saline (salt water). Albuterol can be added to budesonide
(Pulmicort) instead of saline in the nebulizer. Levalbuterol
(Xopenex) comes in premixed vials. The suggested dose is 0.63 or
0.125 mg in 3 ml of saline.
MDI: The most common dose for an MDI is 2 puffs. This should be
given no more often than every 4 hours without approval from your
child's health care provider. Call your provider if your child
needs a dose more than every 4 hours. Always use the MDI with a
valved holding chamber so more medicine reaches the lungs.
Your prescribed dose of inhaled _____________________ is
_______ ml mixed with ______________ and given by nebulizer
____ times a day (about every __________hours) for
_______days.
OR
______ puffs of ____________________ inhaled from an MDI
____ times a day (about every ________hours) or as needed
for asthma symptoms.
What side effects can this drug cause?
The most common side effects are shakiness and an increased heart
rate.
What special instructions should be followed?
Do not increase the number of treatments to greater than ________
within a 24-hour period without checking with your health care
provider. If it seems like your child needs more treatments because
the asthma symptoms are not helped by the medicine, call your health
care provider.
Do not use Xopenex unless the solution is colorless. Store unused
vials in the protective foil pouch provided.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2006 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.