Metered-Dose Inhaler Used with a Spacer
A metered-dose inhaler is a pressurized container that releases a mist
of medicine. Your child inhales the medicine into the airways of the
lungs.
Inhaled asthma medicines contain a gas that helps the medicine get into
the lungs. Chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) is the gas that used to be used in
inhalers. Because it depletes the ozone layer in our atmosphere,
hydrofluoroalkane (HFA) is now used instead. Although the gas in
inhalers has changed, the medicine in HFA inhalers is the same as the
medicine in CFC inhalers. The HFA inhaler looks just like a CFC inhaler
but is a little different. The spray comes out with less force, is
warmer, and has a slightly different taste. It is not felt as much in
the throat when inhaled, but your child still gets the right amount of
medicine.
A device called a spacer can be used with the inhaler. Examples of
spacers are the AeroChamber or the OptiChamber. The spacer helps make
sure the inhaler is at the correct distance from your child's mouth and
at the best angle. Your child can more easily breathe in the medicine,
and not worry about coordinating the timing. The spacer can be used with
or without a mask.
Before the first use, wash the spacer with warm soapy water. Do not
rinse. Allow to air dry.
Attach the inhaler to the spacer as follows:
- Remove the caps from the spacer and metered-dose inhaler.
- Shake the inhaler vigorously.
- If the inhaler has not been used before or if the inhaler has not
been used for a while, you must then "prime" the inhaler. Do this by
spraying several sprays of the medicine into the air. Each time you
use the inhaler, the next dose is drawn into a chamber inside the
inhaler. If the inhaler has not been used or sits for a long time
without being used, some of the medicine leaks out of the holding
area. This means your child will not get the full dose of medicine
the next time it is used. Priming the inhaler makes sure that your
child gets the full dose of the medicine.
- Insert the mouthpiece of the inhaler into the rubber-sealed end of
the spacer.
To use the inhaler with the spacer and mask:
- Select the correct size mask for the patient (small, medium, or
large) and attach to the mouthpiece end.
- Have your child stand or sit up straight.
- Put the mask to your child's face, covering both the nose and mouth.
The mask must be pressed to your child's face to assure that the
medicine can get to the child's lungs.
- Depress the inhaler once.
- Have your child breathe in and out slowly through the spacer for at
least 5 breaths.
- When additional puffs are prescribed by your healthcare provider,
wait 1 minute and repeat.
To use the inhaler with the spacer and mouthpiece:
- Have your child stand or sit up straight.
- Place the chamber into your child's mouth. Ask your child to breathe
slowly in and out of the spacer several times.
- Depress the inhaler once.
- Have your child breathe in as deeply as possible and then hold his
breath for 10 seconds. For children unable to hold their breath,
another method is to breathe in and out slowly for 3 to 5 breaths.
- When your provider prescribes additional puffs, wait 1 minute and
repeat.
Tracking Doses
How to track doses for scheduled medicine used every day:
- Place a blank label around the boot of the inhaler.
- Identify the number of puffs (actuations) available by reading the
label on the inhaler canister.
- Divide the number of available puffs by the prescribed number of
puffs per day. (For example, 120 doses available divided by 4 puffs
per day would equal a 30 day supply of doses.)
- Write the date on the label that you will need to refill the
prescription. Allow a 5 day grace period. (For example if you
started on 7/1, show a date 25 days later (30 day supply minus 5
days).
How track doses for medicine used as needed:
- Place a blank label around the boot of the inhaler.
- Identify the number of puffs (actuations) available by reading the
label on the inhaler canister.
- Write down the start date and number of puffs available on the
label.
- Make a hash mark for each puff used (include wasted puffs).
- Get a refill when 10 puffs are left.
Cleaning Instructions
- Wash the spacer and the plastic case for the inhaler once a week
with soapy tap water. Rinse well and let the parts air dry.
- Replace the one-way valve or get a new spacer when the valve dries
out and starts to curl.
Written by the Asthma Task Force at The Children's Hospital, Denver.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2010-02-02
Last reviewed: 2009-12-14
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.
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