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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although eustachian tube dysfunction and bacterial infection have been shown to cause otitis media with effusion (OME), other etiologies are possible. One of the most common medical conditions in children is
obesity
, which can have effects throughout the body. Little is known, however, about the relationship between
obesity
and OME.
Obesity
may result in altered cytokine expression, gastroesophageal reflux disease, or fat accumulation, all of which may contribute to OME. Conversely, OME may induce taste changes through middle ear cavity inflammation, thus contributing to
obesity
. A similar pattern of taste change has been shown in patients with gustatory nerve anesthesia. Further research on the relationship between
obesity
and OME may help to determine the exact etiology of OME and contribute to our knowledge about the causes of
obesity
.
Curr Allergy
Asthma
Rep 2009 Nov
PMID:Relationship between pediatric obesity and otitis media with effusion. 1981 20
The coincidence of both an
obesity
epidemic and an asthma epidemic among children in the United States has suggested that childhood overweight and sedentary lifestyles may be risk factors for asthma development. We therefore conducted a study of those factors among children enrolled in Head Start Centers located in areas of New York City with high asthma hospitalization rates. Data were gathered from 547 children through an intensive home visit, and physical activity was measured on 463 children using the Actiwatch accelerometer. Data on allergy and asthma symptoms and demographic variables were obtained from parents' responses to a questionnaire and complete data were available from 433 children. Overall physical activity was highest in warmer months, among boys, among children whose mothers did not work or attend school, and among children of mothers born in the United States. Activity was also positively associated with the number of rooms in the home. The season in which the activity data were collected modified many of the associations between demographic predictor variables and activity levels. Nearly half the children were above the range considered healthy weight. In cross-sectional analyses, before and after control for demographic correlates of physical activity, asthma symptoms were not associated with physical activity in this age group. Comparing the highest quartile of activity to the lowest, the odds ratio for asthma was 0.91 (95% CI = 0.46, 1.80). However, the novel associations with physical activity that we have observed may be relevant to the
obesity
epidemic and useful for planning interventions to increase physical activity among preschool children living in cities in the northern United States.
J
Asthma
2009 Oct
PMID:Physical activity and asthma symptoms among New York City Head Start Children. 1986 84
This study examined the relationship between
obesity
and asthma symptom perception in 200 youth with asthma. Repeated subjective and objective peak flow measurements were summarized using the
Asthma
Risk Grid (Klein et al., 2004), resulting in Accurate, Symptom Magnification and Danger Zone scores. Analyses were stratified by age and included ethnicity. For younger children,
obesity
was not significantly related to perception scores. For older children, a significant
obesity
-by-ethnicity interaction for Accurate Symptom Perception scores indicated that obese white children had lower accuracy than white nonobese children, while there was no difference for obese versus nonobese minority children.
Obesity
was also related to higher Symptom Magnification scores regardless of ethnicity for older children. These findings suggest that
obesity
may complicate asthma management by interfering with the ability to accurately perceive symptoms for some patients. More remains to be learned about the role of sociodemographic factors underlying this relationship.
...
PMID:Asthma symptom perception and obesity in children. 1994 34
Childhood asthma is a major concern because it leads to more hospital visits and a heavy economic burden. Proper management and prevention strategies for childhood asthma must be based on correct evaluation of prevalence and risk factors for its development. In Korea, nationwide studies were conducted in 1995 and 2000 on students from 68 elementary schools (age, 6-12 years) and junior high schools (age, 12-15 years) by the Korean Academy of Pediatric Allergy and Respiratory Diseases. We used the Korean version of the International Study of
Asthma
and Allergies in Childhood (ISAAC) written and video questionnaires at the same schools during the same period (October-November). The prevalence of asthma in junior high school children seemed to increase over 5 years. However, in elementary school children, the prevalence of asthma symptoms decreased, although the prevalence of 'diagnosis of asthma, ever' and 'treatment of asthma, last 12 months' increased. In addition, it was found that various factors, such as
obesity
, passive smoking, dietary habits, raising pets at home, and fever/antibiotic use during infancy were associated with childhood asthma. When prevalence of asthma in Korea was compared with that in different regions, the prevalence changes in the 6-7 years age group did not seem to be consistent between regions, whereas similar trends were observed among children aged 13-14 years. To conduct another epidemiological study to evaluate the time trend over time, a third nationwide survey is planned in 2010, and we anticipate ISAAC Phase 3 will explore recent changes in the prevalence of childhood asthma and assess its risk factors in Korean children. On the basis of accurate data on the current status of childhood asthma in 2010, we will be able to establish proper management strategies.
Allergy
Asthma
Immunol Res 2010 Apr
PMID:Prevalence of childhood asthma in Korea: international study of asthma and allergies in childhood. 2035 19
Asthma
and
obesity
, both of which are considered global health issues, affect approximately 300 million individuals worldwide. The observation that asthma and
obesity
tend to increase in parallel may indicate a potential link between these two conditions. The aim of this systematic review of the literature was to investigate the relationship between childhood nutritional status and incidence or persistence of asthma during adolescence. The principal eligibility criteria for selection of articles were including longitudinal analysis, and which measured of exposure during childhood or adolescence and outcome during adolescence. The systematic search initially returned 1563 unique articles. After inspection of titles and reading the abstracts of these articles, we chose 27 for full reading. Of these, 10 were selected to be included in the present review. Of the 10 selected studies, eight showed positive associations between overweight/
obesity
and asthma. Of these, two were independent of sex, three were found only among men and another three only among women. The present study shows strong evidence that, although the role of sex is not clear,
obesity
precedes, and is associated with, the persistence and intensity of symptoms of asthma.
...
PMID:Childhood body mass index and risk of asthma in adolescence: a systematic review. 2040 14
Asthma
is the most common chronic illness in childhood with challenges that revolve around interventions that can potentially alter the course of the disease and concerns regarding the safety of regular use of controller medications. Recent studies suggest that the use of inhaled corticosteroids in very young children with frequent wheezing episodes and at high risk for asthma, while effective, does not alter the eventual progression to asthma. As a controller medication, the safety of inhaled corticosteroids as regards efficacy and risk are reviewed. The use of as-needed ICS as a strategy to reduce risk of adverse events can be explored in children with mild persistent asthma. The key to risk reduction is to titrate the dose of steroids to the lowest dose needed to achieve asthma control. Aside from inhaled corticosteroids, other controller medications are described within the framework of the updated asthma guidelines released by the NIH-National
Asthma
Education and Prevention Program in 2007. Other interventions that may attenuate asthma risk and severity include environmental measures towards allergen avoidance and attention to the increasing prevalence of
obesity
. The use of age-appropriate delivery systems for inhaled medications is also important for asthma control.
...
PMID:Special considerations in pediatric asthma. 2046 90
Asthma
is a common and serious illness with suboptimal outcomes of care. Epidemiological studies show certain comorbidities occurring more frequently than expected with asthma, with some being associated with poor control and a differential response to therapy options. This review summarizes the evidence of clinically important comorbidities, focusing on the best-explored conditions, including rhinitis and rhinosinusitis, anxiety and depression,
obesity
, gastroesophageal reflux, smoking and dysfunctional breathing. The evidence of epidemiological and pathophysiological associations for these comorbidities is explored, and the practical therapeutic implications are considered. Comorbidities are important for clinicians treating asthma as they may be markers of patients at risk of poor outcomes, they may point to specific effective treatment options and they are important to researchers as possible confounding factors in clinical trials.
...
PMID:Impact of comorbidities on asthma. 2047 23
To assess concordance of prevalence rates of asthma, allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and atopic eczema symptoms among adolescents in five Canadian cities. The International Study of
Asthma
and Allergies in Childhood Phase 3 written questionnaires were answered by 8334 adolescents aged 13 to 14 in Vancouver, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Hamilton and Halifax, Canada. Prevalence rates of current symptoms ranged from 13.7-33.0% for wheezing, 14.6-22.6% for allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and 8.2-10.4% for atopic eczema. Using Hamilton as reference, the prevalence of wheezing was significantly higher in Halifax (OR = 1.58; 95% CI 1.36-1.84) and Saskatoon (1.27; 1.07-1.50) and significantly lower in Vancouver (0.51; 0.44-0.59). In contrast, allergic rhinoconjunctivitis was significantly more prevalent in Winnipeg (1.39; 1.16-1.68) and Halifax (1.36; 1.14-1.61) and trended lower in Saskatoon (0.81; 0.66-1.00). Atopic eczema was significantly more prevalent in Winnipeg (1.31; 1.01-1.69) and Vancouver (1.28; 1.04-1.58). Multivariable logistic regression analyses showed the region of residence, being born in Canada, recent use of acetaminophen and heavy exposure to traffic exhaust were significantly associated with all three allergic conditions, while
obesity
and having two or more smokers at home was only associated with increased risk for wheezing. Chinese ethnicity decreased that risk. Among five Canadian centres, the highest prevalence rates of allergic rhinoconjunctivitis or atopic eczema were not observed in the same regions as the highest prevalence rates of wheezing. This disparity in regional variations in the prevalence rates suggests dissimilar risk factors for the development or expression of wheezing (asthma), allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and atopic eczema.
...
PMID:Disparate geographic prevalences of asthma, allergic rhinoconjunctivitis and atopic eczema among adolescents in five Canadian cities. 2049 43
: We investigated the association between airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) and
obesity
in adults referred for confirmation of asthma diagnosis. Data were analyzed for
obesity
class I (body mass index [BMI] 30-34.9 kg/m2), class II (BMI >/= 35-39.9 kg/m2), and class III (BMI >/= 40 kg/m2). Of 861 subjects, 401 demonstrated AHR; the mean dose of methacholine was 4.16 +/- 2.55 mg/mL. A significant association between
obesity
and AHR was evident for all subjects: the odds ratio was 1.37 (95% CI 1.02-1.82; p = .0317). One unit of increased BMI (1 kg/m2) was associated with a 3.1% increase in AHR risk (95% CI 1.01-1.05, p < .005). The odds ratio increased from 1.86 (95% CI 1.27-1.76; p = .0012) for class I to 2.61 (95% CI 1.48-4.60; p = .0006) for class III.
Obesity
was found to be associated with AHR and appears to be a risk factor for asthma.
Allergy
Asthma
Clin Immunol 2008 Jun 15
PMID:Is obesity associated with an increased risk for airway hyperresponsiveness and development of asthma? 2052 25
The
obesity
phenotype associated with asthma is not known. Our objective was to define the relative contribution of various distributions of fat and lean mass to asthma prevalence. Data were obtained from 2,525 participants (including 1,422 females) who underwent dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) at the year 20 examination in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) cohort. Total, truncal, arm and leg distributions of fat and lean mass were adjusted to the person's height. Self-reported asthma was the outcome.
Asthma
among females was associated with greater total fat mass, arm fat mass, total lean mass, truncal lean mass and arm lean mass. Among males, none of these mass measures were significantly associated with asthma. Among females, the association with asthma was stronger for total lean mass than for total fat mass. Further, among various regional distributions of lean and fat mass in females, truncal lean mass was the strongest predictor. Total lean mass is more strongly associated with asthma than total fat mass among females. These findings are contrary to the popular perception that excess physiological fat drives the
obesity
-asthma association. Rather, we hypothesise that ectopic fat within the "lean" tissues drives this association among females.
...
PMID:Lean mass predicts asthma better than fat mass among females. 2052 13
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