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Spacers and Valved-Holding Chambers
If you don’t use your inhaler the
right way, much of the medicine may end up on your tongue, on the
back of your throat, or in the air. A spacer or
valved-holding chamber can help keep this from happening.
A spacer or valved-holding chamber
attaches to the inhaler. It holds the medicine in the chamber long
enough for you to inhale the medicine in one or two slow, deep
breaths. A spacer will help keep you from coughing when using an
inhaler. A spacer will also help prevent you from getting a yeast
infection in your mouth (known as thrush) when taking inhaled
steroid medicines.
How to Use a Metered Dose Inhaler with a
Valved-Holding Chamber or Spacer
To use a spacer or valved-holding
chamber, first read the instructions that came with it, since
there are many types available. Use the general instructions below
to help you get the most from your MDI.
- Remove
cap from metered dose inhaler (MDI).

- Holding
MDI upright, place in end of holding chamber.

- Shake
the MDI and chamber three to five times.

- Tilt
your head back slightly and breathe out.

- Put
your mouth around the holding chamber mouthpiece.

- Squeeze
down on the MDI to send the medicine into the holding chamber.
- Breathe
in slowly and completely, for three to five seconds.

- Hold
your breath for about ten seconds.

- Repeat
as your doctor or asthma counselor tells you to do. Wait one
minute between puffs.
Adapted
from How to Use Your Metered-Dose Inhaler the Right Way,
found in the Practical Guide for the Diagnosis and Management of
Asthma, NIH Publication No. 97-4053, October 1997, National
Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
Pictures courtesy of Institute for Health Studies, Michigan State
University.
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