Lifestyle changes for Carriers

For more information on what it means to be a carrier for Alpha-1, download this free brochure.

Protect lungs from irritants

Smoking increases the amount of neutrophil elastase in lungs and may speed up the progression of lung damage. Assure carriers that quitting may not be easy, but it may be done. Discuss therapeutic and behavior modification programs with your patients.

For US residents, call the American Lung Association (800-LUNG-USA, 800-586-4872) or get more information on quitting.

Learn more about how smoking can accelerate lung function decline.

Prevent infections and treat them aggressively. Your patient responds to infection by producing neutrophil elastase, which can damage lungs.

Avoid environmental pollutants, both at home and in the workplace, if possible.

Second-hand smoke is dangerous if your patient is a carrier for Alpha-1. If someone in the household smokes, your patient should ask them to stop, or step outside when smoking, or avoid them when they smoke.

Pollutants in the workplace are harmful. If your patient is a carrier, he or she should wear a mask around dust or vapors. They can ask to be moved to a place with more favorable conditions. Together, you can consult an environmental or occupational physician, if necessary.

Air pollution can hurt carriers of Alpha-1. Advise them to stay indoors when ozone values are too high, and consider moving to a less polluted area.

Wood stoves generate harmful, lung-damaging particles.

Home heating and air conditioning filters must be changed on a regular basis to reduce inhaled particulates.

Help Carriers stay healthy. Download Managing Environmental Risk Factors, a brochure from AlphaNet.

Proper nutrition

Good nutrition helps maintain lung function 3 ways:

  1. Improves muscle function—Your patient’s energy levels are lowered when they don’t eat enough. Muscle tissue, including breathing muscles, may be used to meet energy needs. This can lead to reduced strength, increased fatigue, and breathlessness. Bad nutrition can have an adverse effect on the diaphragm. A healthy diet preserves the body's energy and strength.
  2. Increases "triggers" for breathing—As carriers for Alpha-1, your patients have low levels of blood oxygen, which can trigger increased respiration.1 Poor nutrition adversely affects signaling and exacerbates the problem of low blood oxygen. Proper eating habits help avoid this.
  3. Improves resistance to infection—Poor nutrition increases susceptibility to lung infections, which makes it harder for them to remove bacteria. Avoiding infection in the lungs is important for carriers. Good eating habits are an important way to maintain health.

Maintain proper weight

Weight loss is a common problem in patients with chronic lung diseases; up to 40% of patients have progressive weight loss. One theory is that carriers take in fewer calories. Another is that patients with chronic lung diseases burn more calories because they use more energy breathing. What may be enough for a person with normal lung function may not be enough for a carrier for Alpha-1.

Exercise

Routine exercise improves mental outlook, stamina, and physical well-being. The long-term benefits are significant.1,2

Discuss goals with your patients who are carriers, and tailor an exercise program to their needs. Many patients find that simple, routine stretching exercises, walking, or bicycling improves exercise tolerance.

The right amount of exercise is different for each individual depending on physical well-being and lung function. Advise them to start with low-intensity activity such as walking. Chart out a plan and encourage them to record their progress. After 3 to 4 weeks, they should see progress. Set realistic goals and redefine them as tolerance and stamina improve.1,2

Reduce stress

Managing stress will help carriers for Alpha-1 feel better and avoid adverse effects on health. Stress management offers benefits such as improved breathing, reduced shortness of breath, and relief of anxiety through relaxation techniques.

Breathing exercises and muscle relaxation are the most common ways to relieve stress. Other techniques include biofeedback, visualization, hypnosis, systematic desensitization, positive thinking, and yoga.

The following is a brief summary of stress management techniques:

  • Breathing exercises relieve stress and increase exercise tolerance. For best results, practice proper breathing techniques on a daily basis
  • Muscle relaxation improves overall sense of well-being and comfort. Through repetition, carriers for Alpha-1 learn to recognize and respond to the signs of muscle tension
  • Biofeedback reinforces proper breathing and relaxation techniques. This technique teaches patients to use muscles properly to relieve stress
  • Visualization gives negative feelings a mental representation and changes that image into something positive. Music and artwork enhance the relaxation benefits of visualization
  • Hypnotherapy is guided relaxation that helps patients recall a pleasurable experience and return to that moment during times of stress.
  • Systemic desensitization helps patients feel comfortable with stress-producing events
  • Positive thinking involves changing negative thoughts into positive ones
  • Yoga involves posture control and slow, deep breathing. With practice, patients can make this beneficial breathing pattern an instinctive reflex

next: How Smoke Accelerates Lung Function Decline >

Important Safety Information

PROLASTIN-C, Alpha1-Proteinase Inhibitor (Human) is indicated for chronic augmentation and maintenance therapy in adults with emphysema due to deficiency of alpha1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency). The effect of augmentation therapy with any alpha1-proteinase inhibitor (alpha1-PI) on pulmonary exacerbations and on the progression of emphysema in alpha1-antitrypsin deficiency has not been demonstrated in randomized, controlled clinical trials. PROLASTIN-C is not indicated as therapy for lung disease in patients in whom severe Alpha1-PI deficiency has not been established.

PROLASTIN-C may contain trace amounts of IgA. Patients with known antibodies to IgA, which can be present in patients with selective or severe IgA deficiency, have a greater risk of developing potentially severe hypersensitivity and anaphylactic reactions. PROLASTIN-C is contraindicated in patients with antibodies against IgA.

The most common drug related adverse reactions during clinical trials in ≥ 1% of subjects were chills, malaise, headache, rash, hot flush, and pruritus.

PROLASTIN-C is made from human plasma. Products made from human plasma may carry a risk of transmitting infectious agents, e.g., viruses, and, theoretically, the Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) agent.

Please see accompanying PROLASTIN-C Full Prescribing Information for complete prescribing details.

You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch, or call 1-800-FDA-1088.

References
  1. Goldstein SA, Askanazi J. Exercise, diet, and the rehabilitation of lung patients. In: Winick M, ed. Nutrition and Exercise. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons;1986:183-186.
  2. Bach JR, ed. Pulmonary Rehabilitation: the Obstructive and Paralytic Conditions. Philadelphia, PA: Hanley & Belfus;1996.