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Query: KEGG:D04296 (
Asthma
)
25,733
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of the present study was to determine the prevalence of asthma-related symptoms in a group of primary school children, by means of a questionnaire completed by their parents, and their lung function using spirometry and the forced oscillation technique (FOT). Also investigated were diagnostic labeling and medical prescription. We approached 535 children, from two primary schools in Maastricht, the Netherlands. Completed questionnaires were received from 482 children (90%). Valid lung function values were obtained in 470 of these children (98%). The lifetime prevalence of wheeze and attacks of shortness of breath with wheeze was 29% and 19%, respectively. The period prevalence of wheeze was 15%, 13% reported chronic cough, and 10% attacks of shortness of breath with wheeze. The doctor-diagnosed asthma and
bronchitis
prevalence was 6% and 19%, respectively. Of the children diagnosed as having asthma, 69% used antiasthma medication; none of the children diagnosed as having
bronchitis
used antiasthma medication. A symptom-based asthma prevalence of 11% was calculated. Statistically significant differences in spirometric and FOT indices were found between the children with and without complaints. In conclusion, among the 482 investigated children a relatively high prevalence of unrecognized or misclassified, and therefore undertreated, asthma-related symptoms was found. These observations were confirmed by the lung function data, in that we found significant differences in spirometric and FOT indices between children with and without complaints.
J
Asthma
1994
PMID:Asthma-related symptoms and lung function in primary school children. 804 Jan 54
Asthma
admissions of children aged 5 years or younger to the Kaiser Foundation Hospital in Honolulu were analyzed for the years 1986-1989. Admissions increased at an annual rate of 4.5% during the study period, in agreement with a worldwide trend. Most children wheezed before their first admission, but their diagnosis was
bronchitis
rather than asthma. This shows that physicians find it difficult to diagnose asthma in young children. Pneumonia was the initial diagnosis in 25% of admissions, mainly due to overinterpretation of chest radiographs, and this contributed to the overuse of antibiotics. Inpatient treatment with inhaled and systemic bronchodilators and anti-inflammatory agents conformed to standard practice. Recent adoption of the guidelines by the National
Asthma
Education program and the establishment of an outreach program and asthma register should promote more appropriate outpatient treatment and a reduction of admissions for asthma.
...
PMID:Hospital admissions of young children for status asthmaticus in Honolulu, Hawaii, 1986 to 1989. 826 47
Manitoba has a universally accessible health-care system that records physician contacts and hospitalizations in such a way that they can be ascribed to individuals. We examined the prevalence of physician-diagnosed asthma,
bronchitis
, and airways obstruction (total respiratory morbidity [TRM]) in Winnipeg in 1988 and 1992, using place of residence to divide people into quintiles according to average family income. Physician office visits, hospitalizations, and consultation referrals were each examined. Three age groups: 0 to 14 yr, 15 to 34 yr, and > or = 35 yr were studied. The prevalence of TRM was greater in low- than in high-income quintiles.
Asthma
prevalence was unrelated to income in the younger age groups; in the older group asthma was more common in low-income groups, but was less strongly related to income than was TRM.
Asthma
prevalence increased over the years studied, but the increase was not related to income level. There was some evidence of income-related diagnostic bias in that low-income patients were more likely to be labeled with a related diagnosis in addition to asthma than were high-income patients. Low-income patients had more physician contacts than did high-income patients. In terms of physician office visits, care continuity did not differ among income quintiles. Low-income quintiles had more hospitalizations than did high-income quintiles, and differences were larger than could be accounted for by diagnostic bias; asthma was probably more severe in low-income quintiles. High-income quintiles had more consultation referrals than did low-income quintiles.
...
PMID:Income level and asthma prevalence and care patterns. 911 87
Asthma
and allergic disorders have been on the increase in recent decades, especially among children living in affluent countries; some aspects of the "Western" way of life may explain this trend. We evaluated the relation of aeroallergen skin test reactivity with socioeconomic status, number of siblings, and respiratory infections in early life. We examined a total of 2,226 schoolchildren, ages 7-11 years, in three areas of Lazio, Italy. Skin prick tests were performed to assess atopic status, and self-administered questionnaires were completed by the parents. The prevalence of prick test positivity was greater among children whose fathers were in the highest educational level than among those in the lowest [prevalence ratio (PR) = 1.58; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.21-2.06]. There was also a lower prevalence of atopy among larger sibships (PR = 0.38 for subjects with four or more siblings vs those without siblings; 95% CI = 0.14-0.99). A history of
bronchitis
or bronchiolitis before age 2 years was weakly associated with an increased risk of atopy, whereas a history of pertussis or pneumonia was not. Both the effect of father's education and the influence of larger sibship size remained when we adjusted for several potential confounding factors, including respiratory infections in early life. We infer that higher socioeconomic status and lower sibling number are determinants of atopy in this Italian population. Protection arising from early severe respiratory infections does not explain this association, although we cannot exclude a role for other viral infections.
...
PMID:Socioeconomic status, number of siblings, and respiratory infections in early life as determinants of atopy in children. 927 Sep 60
Levels of mortality due to asthma are declining in some countries. To measure trends in mortality from asthma in southern Brazil among children and young adults, the death certificates of 425 people in the state of Rio Grande do Sul aged 5-39 years in whom asthma was reported to be the underlying cause of death during the period 1970-92 were reviewed.
Asthma
mortality rates among people aged 5-19 and 20-39 years were 0.04-0.39/100,000 and 0.28-0.75/100,000, respectively, and were nonuniformly distributed over the study period. The mean annual increase in mortality rate among 5-19 year olds was 0.01, an average annual percentage increase of 6.8%, with a total increase of 352% during 1970-92. This increase was not due to a shift in labeling from
bronchitis
to asthma. Among people aged 20-39 years, asthma and
bronchitis
mortality rates showed no trend of increase or decrease. Reasons for the dramatic increase in asthma-related mortality among 5-19 year olds are unclear.
Ann Allergy
Asthma
Immunol 1999 Mar
PMID:Trends in asthma mortality in young people in southern Brazil. 1061 52
Asthma
and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are complex conditions with imprecise definitions, which make definitive morphological comparisons difficult. The airways in asthma are occluded by tenacious plugs of exudate and mucus, and there is fragility of airway surface epithelium, thickening of the reticular layer beneath the epithelial basal lamina (the last two not usually features of COPD), and bronchial vessel congestion and oedema. There is an increased inflammatory infiltrate comprising 'activated' lymphocytes and eosinophils with release of granular content in the latter, and enlargement of bronchial smooth muscle, particularly in medium-sized bronchi. CD4+ve lymphocytes predominate over CD8+ve cells and neutrophils are sparse. In contrast, three conditions contribute to COPD. In chronic bronchitis there is cough and mucous hypersecretion with enlargement of tracheobronchial submucosal glands and a disproportionate increase of mucous acini. CD8+ve lymphocytes predominate over CD4+ve cells and there are increased numbers of subepithelial macrophages and intra-epithelial neutrophils. Exacerbations of
bronchitis
are associated with a tissue eosinophilia, apparent absence of IL-5 protein but gene expression for IL-4 and IL-5 is present. In small or peripheral airways disease, there is inflammation of bronchioli and mucous metaplasia and hyperplasia, with increased intraluminal mucus, increased wall muscle, fibrosis, and airway stenoses (also referred to as chronic obstructive bronchiolitis). Respiratory bronchiolitis involving increased numbers of pigmented macrophages is a critically important early lesion. Increasingly severe peribronchiolitis includes infiltration of T lymphocytes in which the CD8+ subset again predominates. These inflammatory changes may predispose to the development of centrilobular emphysema and reduced FEV1 via the destruction of alveolar attachments. In emphysema there is abnormal, permanent enlargement of airspaces distal to the terminal bronchiolus (i.e. within the acinus) accompanied by destruction of alveolar walls and without obvious fibrosis. The severity of emphysema, rather than type, appears to be the most important determinant of chronic deterioration of airflow, and in this there may be significant loss of elastic recoil and microscopic emphysema prior to the observed macroscopic destruction of the acinus.
...
PMID:Differences and similarities between chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma. 1042 18
During the spring of 1995, schoolchildren aged 7-13 y who lived in a rural area in Israel were studied. These children lived in two communities: in one community, the population was exposed to pollution from a cement factory and quarries; the population of the second community was not exposed to pollution from these sources. The children from participating schools performed forced vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in 1 s, peak expiratory flow, forced expiratory flow at 50%, and forced expiratory flow at 25%. Parents completed an American Thoracic Society-National Heart and Lung Institute health questionnaire, which included information about respiratory symptoms and diseases of the children and information about background variables. A trend of higher prevalence of most respiratory symptoms occurred in 638 children who were growing up in the community that bordered the industrial zone, compared with 338 children from the unexposed community. Cough without cold, sputum without cold, and cough accompanied by sputum were the most prevalent symptoms.
Asthma
diagnosed by a physician was reported more frequently for children who lived near the polluting sources. No consistent trend of reduced pulmonary function tests was observed among children who lived in the polluted community; however, peak expiratory flow was significantly lower among these children. Odds ratio values, calculated from logistic regressions in which we controlled for respiratory problems among parents, mothers who smoked, crowding index, education of mothers, and residential heating, were 3.6 (p value for model = .244) for cough without cold, 4.0 (p value for model = .333) for asthma, and 2.2 (p value for model = .753) for asthma and/or
bronchitis
in the polluted area, compared with 1.0 in the low-pollution community. Total suspended particulate matter and levels of airborne particles less than 10 microns, measured in the community bordering the industrial zone, very often violated the relevant 24-h Israeli standards of 200 microg/m3 and 150 microg/m3, respectively.
...
PMID:Respiratory problems associated with exposure to airborne particles in the community. 1044 37
The impact of inner city air pollution on the development of respiratory and atopic diseases in childhood is still unclear. In a cross sectional study in Dresden, Germany, 5,421 children in two age groups (5-7 yrs and 9-11 yrs) were studied according to the International Study of
Asthma
and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) phase II protocol. The prevalences of wheezing and cough as well as doctor diagnosed asthma and
bronchitis
were assessed by parental questionnaires. Children also underwent skin-prick testing, venipuncture for the measurement of serum immunoglobulin (Ig)E, lung function testing and a bronchial challenge test (4.5% saline) to assess airway hyperresponsiveness. Exposure was assessed on an individual basis by relating mean annual air pollution levels (SO2, NO2, CO, benzene, and O3) which had been measured on a 1 km2 grid, to the home and school address of each study subject. After adjusting for potential confounding factors an increase in the exposure to benzene of 1 microg x m3 air was associated with an increased prevalence of morning cough (adjusted odds ratio (aOR)): 1.15; 1.04-1.27) and
bronchitis
(aOR: 1.11; 1.03-1.19). Similar associations were observed for NO2 and CO. In turn, the prevalences of atopic sensitization, symptoms of atopic diseases and bronchial hyperresponsiveness were not positively associated with exposure to any of these pollutants. It is concluded that in this study a moderate increase in exposure to traffic-related air pollution was associated with an increased prevalence of cough and
bronchitis
, but not with atopic conditions in children.
...
PMID:Inner city air pollution and respiratory health and atopy in children. 1054 91
Asthma
is common among older persons, affecting approximately 4 to 8% of those above the age of 65 years. Despite its prevalence, late onset asthma may be misdiagnosed and inadequately treated, with important negative consequences for the patient's health. The histopathology of late onset disease appears to be similar to that of asthma in general, with persistent airway inflammation a characteristic feature. It is less clear, however, that allergic exposure and sensitisation play the same role in the development of disease in adults as they do in children. Atopy is less common among those with late onset asthma, and the prevalence of elevated immunoglobulin E levels is lower among those aged over 55 years of age than younger patients. Occupational asthma is an aetiological consideration unique to adult onset disease, with important implications for treatment. The differential diagnosis for cough, wheeze, and dyspnoea in the elderly is broad, and includes chronic obstructive
bronchitis
, bronchiectasis, congestive heart failure, lung cancer with endobronchial lesion and vocal cord dysfunction. Keys to accurate diagnosis include a good history and physical examination, the demonstration of reversible airways obstruction on pulmonary function tests and a favorable response to treatment. Inhaled corticosteroid therapy is recommended for patients with persistent disease, and careful instruction in the use of metered-dose inhalers is particularly important for the elderly.
...
PMID:Late onset asthma: epidemiology, diagnosis and treatment. 1119 Apr 18
Asthma
is the most common chronic condition in paediatrics. Nowadays the prevalence is of multi-factorial origin. Clinical symptoms in children are often deceptive (isolated cough, winter
bronchitis
, caused by effort) often to the point of delaying diagnosis. This depends on a network of clinical arguments established by indispensable complementary investigations (thoracic plate and exploration of respiratory function). Search for atopy is systematic whatever the age of the child. Therapeutic care includes educative programmes for both children and their parents. Basal treatment is necessary when the asthma is persistent. Recourse must be made to drugs of which the type and dosage vary according to the state of development. Inhaled corticosteroid is often indicated for a prolonged period. Indications for specific desensitization are now well codified. The concern cases where the allergy has a significant impact on the development of the asthma. Individualised reception plans give a better integration of asthmatic children into school.
...
PMID:[Asthma in children]. 1120 71
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