Skip to Content

End of Life Online Curriculum - Modules

 

Dyspnea: How to Assess and Palliate Dyspnea (Air-Hunger)

Pearls Road Sign
  • Dyspnea is a very common symptom in patients with advance illness.
  • There is poor correlation between oxygen saturation and the perception of dyspnea.
  • Identify reversible causes and treat as appropriate.
  • Interventions should be kept in line with goals of care with dyspnea relief as one of the therapeutic goals. Benefits and burdens must be carefully considered.
  • Non-pharmacologic approaches are often useful, readily applicable, and inexpensive.
  • Morphine is the mainstay of treatment for dyspnea in terminally ill patients.
  • Opioid titration requires repeated assessments to achieve maximal benefits and to avoid side effects.
  • The best indicator of moderate opioid toxicity is bradycardia.
  • Respiratory depression rarely occurs when opioids are titrated upward in a step-wise fashion.
  • Document justification for any dosage increase of opioids.
  • Any change in intensity or quality of dyspnea merits a review of therapy and possible adjustment of opioids.

Top

Home | Project Website | ToolBox | Terms of Use |

©End of Life Curriculum Project, a joint project of the US Veterans Administration and SUMMIT, Stanford University Medical School.
Funded by a grant to the Veterans Administration Nationwide Palliative Care Network by the National Library of Medicine. VJ Periyakoil, MD, Director.