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Asthma, puffiness, what medicine to take?

Emphysema and asthma often need to use oral drugs according to clinical symptoms, mainly including cough relieving and expectorant drugs, antibiotics and so on. However, some patients simply use oral drugs, which can not control the disease well. At this time, it is suggested that the combination of corresponding inhalants is better.

1. Cough-relieving and expectorant drugs: When emphysema, asthma and cough are severe, you can take oral antitussive drugs, such as compound methoxyphenamine capsules, feilike mixture and compound licorice tablets. When the sputum is thick and difficult to cough up, ambroxol hydrochloride tablets and acetylcysteine effervescent tablets can be taken orally to eliminate phlegm;

2. Antibiotics: Some patients with emphysema and asthma need oral antibiotics if they have respiratory bacterial infection, such as cefaclor tablets and levofloxacin hydrochloride capsules.

3. Other drugs: When patients with emphysema and asthma have asthma, they can take orally leukotriene regulator such as montelukast sodium tablets to reduce airway sensitivity and help control asthma. If they have symptoms of asthma and chest tightness, they can take orally theophylline sustained-release tablets to help relieve spasm and asthma.

Patients with emphysema and asthma are better treated with related inhalants, such as glucocorticoids. However, inhaled glucocorticoids must be used for a long time to control the disease, such as budesonide formoterol inhalation powder mist. Emphysema requires long-term standardized use of long-acting bronchodilators to delay the decline of lung function and improve exercise tolerance, such as indat Rogron bromide powder inhalation and tiotropium bromide powder inhalation. Some patients need to use salbutamol sulfate inhalation aerosol and ipratropium bromide solution for inhalation.