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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (
cough
)
23,843
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Respiratory questionnaires (ATS-
DLD
-78) were administered to 5557 adult women in a rural area of Western Pennsylvania to evaluate the health effects of air pollution resulting from coal combustion. Air pollution data were derived from 17 air quality monitor sites and stratified to define low, medium, and high pollution areas. The means of 4 yr (1975-1978) annual averages for sulfur dioxide in each strata were 62, 66, and 99 micrograms/m3, respectively. Total suspended particulates were not tested as a risk factor because they reflected air pollution from sources other than coal combustion (e.g., agricultural, road dusts). Risks of respiratory symptoms were evaluated in a multiple logistic model that adjusted for several potential confounding factors. The risk of "wheeze most days or nights" in nonsmokers residing in the high and medium pollution areas was 1.58 and 1.26 (P = .02), respectively, relative to residents in the low pollution area. In the subset of residents who had lived in the same location for at least 5 yr, relative risks increased to 1.95 and 1.40 (P less than .01), respectively. An increased risk of grade 3 dyspnea in nonsmokers was associated with sulfur dioxide but did not achieve statistical significance (P = .11), and there was no association of
cough
or phlegm and air pollution in nonsmokers. Cigarette smoking characteristics were the major determinant of respiratory symptoms in smokers, and no independent association of air pollution was found. This study suggests that wheezing may be associated with ambient exposure to sulfur dioxide in nonsmokers, but no effect of sulfur dioxide on cigarette smokers was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Health effects of air pollution due to coal combustion in the Chestnut Ridge Region of Pennsylvania: results of cross-sectional analysis in adults. 660 12
Standardized respiratory disease questionnaires (ATS-
DLD
-78) were administered to 5,686 adult women. Risk factors were evaluated by logistic analysis that adjusted for multiple potential confounding factors. Among current smokers, the number of cigarettes smoked per day was consistently the strongest risk factor for chronic cough, chronic phlegm, wheeze, and dyspnea. The odds ratios for these symptoms in a smoker of 25 or more cigarettes per day relative to a smoker of 1--14 cigarettes per day were 4.74, 4.21, 2.05, and 3.71, respectively. Ex-smokers showed risks between those of current and never smokers. Cigarette tar content was a significant independent risk factor for chronic cough (p = 0.005) and of borderline significance for chronic phlegm (p = 0.077). High tar cigarette smokers in this population (average, 22 mg) had an odds ratio of 2.01 for chronic cough and 1.59 for chronic phlegm relative to low tar cigarette smokers (average, 7 mg). The effect of cigarette tar was linear and independent of cigarettes smoked per day. Smoke inhalation was a significant risk factor for chronic cough (p = 0.029) and for chronic phlegm (p = 0.038). Tar content and smoke inhalation were not significant risk factors for wheeze or dyspnea. Cigarette particulate content (tar) appears to be causally linked to
cough
and phlegm production., but the association of cigarette smoking and symptoms of wheeze and dyspnea may be more strongly related to the vapor phase of cigarette smoke.
...
PMID:Effect of cigarette tar content and smoking habits on respiratory symptoms in women. 709 75
Studies of respiratory questionnaire efficacy have emphasized reliability of responses; few have validated symptom response with objective measures of pulmonary function. To determine whether respiratory symptoms are associated with diminished pulmonary function, symptoms reported on the American Thoracic Society (ATS-
DLD
-78A) questionnaire were correlated cross-sectionally with measured spirometric volumes in 816 asbestos-exposed workers.
Cough
, phlegm, wheeze, and dyspnea were inversely related to pulmonary function.
Cough
, phlegm, and chronic bronchitis were associated with a 2 to 8% reduction (p < 0.001) in predicted values for forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume (FEV1); wheeze and dyspnea were clinically more significant, with an 11 to 17% reduction (p < 0.001). Wheeze, dyspnea, and roentgenographic fibrosis were all significant independent predictors of risk for restrictive impairment. These results support the validity of the ATS questionnaire as an epidemiologic tool and emphasize the importance of clinical history in assessing respiratory status.
...
PMID:Correlation between respiratory symptoms and pulmonary function in asbestos-exposed workers. 831 11
The purpose of this study was to examine the relation between development of respiratory symptoms and the rate of change in ventilatory lung function in young adults during a study period of 8 yr. The study population consisted of 391 subjects who were 15 to 40 yr of age at initial examination, when they underwent spirometry and an interviewer-administered ATS-
DLD
-78-A questionnaire on respiratory health, and who were reexamined 8 yr later. The association between the development of symptoms and the rate of change in FEV1 over time (delta FEV1, ml/yr) was studied in a linear regression model that included the potential confounders and other determinants of the outcome. The presence of modification by such factors as smoking, childhood exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, gender, or atopy was assessed by the significance of interaction terms between potential modifiers and incident symptoms. Subjects who developed wheezing and dyspnea and in whom a doctor diagnosed asthma had a significantly greater average annual change in FEV1 compared with those without respiratory symptoms or asthma (-12.3 ml/yr, SE 5.0; -16.2 ml/yr, SE 5.5; and -42.6 ml/yr, SE 11.5, respectively). When focusing on subjects without a diagnosis of asthma, the associations with appearance of wheezing and dyspnea remained significant. The associations were in general stronger in never smokers compared with smokers and were strongest in ex-smokers. The presence of atopy was a significant modifier, so that in subjects with atopy there was a stronger negative association between the onset of
cough
and asthma and delta FEV1 than in those without.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Respiratory symptoms in young adults should not be overlooked. 843 Sep 59