COVID-19 in Patients with Asthma: Review and Implications for Care of Adult Patients with an Osteopathic Component

Authors

  • Daniel J. Frasca, DO Associate Director, Virginia Commonwealth University, Riverside Family Medicine Residency Program, Newport News, VA
  • Samantha Wolf, DO Dwight David Eisenhower Army Medical Center Family Medicine Residency, Fort Gordon, GA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33181/13087

Abstract

Patients with asthma who have COVID-19 typically present with rhinitis, rhinosinusitis, cough, and shortness of breath and rarely with wheezing. Family physicians should consider a patient’s asthma subtype, pertinent medical history, and medications. Maintenance medications, including inhaled corticosteroids (ICS), should be continued for most patients. Whether to start ICS in patients with asthma who have COVID-19 should be considered, as the risks and benefits are unclear, and systemic corticosteroids should be avoided in patients with asthma who have COVID-19 if alternatives exist. Pregnant patients with both asthma and COVID-19 should be comanaged by an obstetrician, with consideration for early induction of labor. Behavioral health topics and osteopathic principles and manipulative techniques should be considered in patients with COVID-19 and asthma. Generalities are challenging to make, but patients with asthma do not seem to have worse outcomes with COVID-19 than patients without asthma.

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Published

2022-11-30

How to Cite

Frasca, Daniel J., and Samantha Wolf. “COVID-19 in Patients With Asthma: Review and Implications for Care of Adult Patients With an Osteopathic Component”. Osteopathic Family Physician, vol. 14, no. 6, Nov. 2022, pp. 17–21, doi:10.33181/13087.