Acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis (AECB)
- Chronic bronchitis - productive cough for at least 3 months/year for at least 2 consecutive years.
- Criteria for acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis:
↑ sputum volume
↑ sputum purulence
↑ dyspnea.
- Antibiotic therapy is only recommended if two or more of above criteria are present.
- Approximately 50% of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis are viral in etiology.
- No class of antibiotic has been shown to be superior to amoxicillin in the management of AECB.
- Adjunctive therapy is essential to management:
smoking cessation
-
bronchodilators:
Ipratropium (Atrovent®) and short acting B-agonists (fenoterol, salbutamol, terbutaline) are effective in combination.
Long acting B-agonists (formoterol, salmeterol) or anticholinergics (tiotropium) are not currently indicated in the management of AECB but may be useful in chronic COPD.
-
corticosteroids:
Systemic corticosteroids are indicated in most cases (prednisone 0.5-1mg/kg/d for 3-14 days).
Inhaled corticosteroids are not indicated in the management of AECB but may be useful in chronic COPD.
O2 therapy.
- COPD patients should be given annual influenza vaccine, and pneumococcal vaccine where indicated.
- The role of Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydia pneumoniae in AECB has not been fully established. Empiric therapy for these organisms is not recommended.