Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0037090 (Respiratory symptoms)
467 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Respiratory symptoms, spirometry, forced expiratory flows, and the nitrogen closing volume test were studied in 119 welders and 90 controls, matched with respect to age, height, and smoking habits. Respiratory symptoms according to a questionnaire were more prevalent in the welders. No short-term changes of the measured variables during the day or week attributable to welding were found in twenty-one nonsmoking welders. Compared to the controls, closing volume and closing capacity (i. e., closing volume + residual volume) were significantly higher, and total lung capacity and the amplitude of the cardiogenic oscillations in the nitrogen curve were significantly lower in the welders who were nonsmokers or exsmokers, whereas there were no differences among smokers. These findings in welders may be attributable to deposition of welding fume particles in peripheral small airways or alveoli.
...
PMID:Effects of electric arc welding on ventilatory lung function. 47 60

The relationship between home dampness and respiratory health was studied in two populations of children of 6-12 years old, living in the south east of the Netherlands. In one study, lung function was measured at the schools, and in both studies, information on respiratory symptoms was collected from a self-administered questionnaire completed by the parents of the children. Information on home dampness was collected by questionnaire. Information on other potential indoor determinants of respiratory health, like (sources of) nitrogen dioxide and smoking in the home was collected by questionnaire as well. Respiratory symptoms were found to be associated with home dampness. There was a weak, negative association between MMEF and reporting of mould in the home. Several potential biases were evaluated. It was not considered likely that the results could be explained by information, selection or confounding bias. However, further work is needed to conclusively exclude these biases, and to develop objective measures of home dampness for use in epidemiologic studies.
...
PMID:Associations between questionnaire reports of home dampness and childhood respiratory symptoms. 148 Sep 60

Sixteen welders, welding under typical New Zealand conditions, had ambient air within their welding helmets sampled and analysed for ozone, nitrogen oxides, fluoride, carbon monoxide, aluminium, chromium, iron, nickel, zinc and total dust. Postshift urinary metals were also analysed, and a respiratory questionnaire completed for each welder. Levels above the New Zealand Workplace Exposure Standard (WES) were found for nitrogen dioxide in four welders (two TIG, one MMA and one plasma cutter), and for total chromium in one plasma cutter, who also had a nickel level of 24% of the WES. Dust levels were highest in the plasma cutters, with one reaching 8.67 mg/m3 (WES = 5 mg/m3). Urinary levels however did not indicate excessive short or long term uptake. Where efficient fume extraction was in use, levels of air contaminants were lower than with natural ventilation. Respiratory symptoms were reported by 67% of welders, 38% meeting criteria for chronic bronchitis (relative risk = 2.0). Smoking welders reported more symptoms than nonsmoking welders.
...
PMID:Exposure to fumes in typical New Zealand welding operations. 189 Nov 37

The effect of indoor exposure to nitrogen dioxide on respiratory health was studied over a period of 2 yr in a population of nonsmoking Dutch children 6 to 12 yr of age. Lung function was measured at the schools, and information on respiratory symptoms was collected from a self-administered questionnaire completed by the parents of the children. Nitrogen dioxide was measured in the homes of all children with Palmes' diffusion tubes. In addition, information on smoking and dampness in the home was collected by questionnaire. There was no relationship between exposure to nitrogen dioxide in the home and respiratory symptoms. Respiratory symptoms were found to be associated with exposure to tobacco smoke and home dampness. There was a weak, negative association between maximal midexpiratory flow (MMEF) and exposure to nitrogen dioxide. FEV1, peak expiratory flow, and MMEF were all negatively associated with exposure to tobacco smoke. Home dampness was not associated with pulmonary function. Lung function growth, measured over a period of 2 yr, was not consistently associated with any of the indoor exposure variables. The development of respiratory symptoms over time was not associated with indoor exposure to nitrogen dioxide. There was a significant association between exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in the home and the development of wheeze. There was also a significant association between home dampness and the development of cough.
...
PMID:Respiratory health effects of the indoor environment in a population of Dutch children. 224 Aug 40

The urinary hydroxyproline excretion was investigated in a population of 6- to 9-year-old schoolchildren living in the Netherlands. Early morning samples of urine were collected at the end of a week in which personal and home monitoring for nitrogen dioxide (NO2) was carried out, and in which detailed information on gas appliances and on parental smoking habits was gathered. In addition, the pulmonary function of the children was measured, and their respiratory symptoms were collected using a standardized questionnaire which was completed by the parents. The hydroxyproline concentrations were standardized for urinary creatinine content. The hydroxyproline/creatinine ratio (HOP/C ratio) was found to be unrelated to NO2 exposure. The presence of major NO2-sources in the kitchen, vented and unvented gas-fired waterheaters, was significantly associated with elevated HOP/C ratios, due to a negative relationship with the creatinine concentration. There was a tendency for HOP/C to increase with the amount of tobacco smoked in the presence of a child. Respiratory symptoms and pulmonary function were unrelated to HOP/C. In this population, the urinary HOP/C ratio was not found to be a close correlate of exposure to NO2 or tobacco smoke, and of respiratory symptoms and pulmonary function.
...
PMID:Hydroxyproline excretion in schoolchildren and its relationship to measures of indoor air pollution. 357 Apr 86

Thirty-six children younger than 1 yr of age hospitalized for whooping cough approximately 9 yr previously (cases) were compared with 36 control children of the same age and sex. Subjects were sampled from participants in an earlier large field study of the long-term sequelae of whooping cough. Respiratory symptoms were more common in cases, although the differences were not statistically significant. Cases were significantly more likely either to be atopic or to have a family history of wheezing illness. There were no significant differences between cases and control subjects in lung function indices derived from maximal expiratory flow volume loops or from single-breath nitrogen washout tests or in bronchial reactivity as judged by the histamine challenge PC20. The evidence from both the present and the earlier study indicates that whooping cough is unlikely to be a causal factor in later respiratory illnesses and symptoms and that no deficit in lung function can be detected in later childhood. The disease may, however, occur more frequently or be more easily recognized in children with environmental or constitutional factors that predispose to respiratory morbidity.
...
PMID:Effect of whooping cough in infancy on subsequent lung function and bronchial reactivity. 374 Jun 53

Respiratory symptoms and pulmonary function were compared in 46 nonsmoking children aged 10 to 16 years, whose parents were smokers, and an identical number of children (matched for sex, age and height) whose parents were nonsmokers. Passive exposure to parental tobacco smoke resulted in a higher prevalence of respiratory symptoms, more frequent upper airway infections and a significant decrease in forced expiratory flows; these effects were more marked in boys. The single-breath nitrogen washout test, a sensitive test of small airways obstruction in adults, did not detect any effect of involuntary smoking in this limited sample of children.
...
PMID:The single-breath nitrogen test does not detect functional impairment in children with passive exposure to tobacco smoke. 382 51

Nitrogen dioxide levels were measured in 80 homes in the Latrobe Valley, Victoria, Australia, using passive samplers. Some 148 children between 7 and 14 yr of age were recruited as study participants, 53 of whom had asthma. Health outcomes for the children were studied using a respiratory questionnaire, skin prick tests, and peak flow measurements. Nitrogen dioxide concentrations were low, with an indoor median of 11.6 microgram/m3 (6.0 ppb), and a maximum of 246 microgram/m3 (128 ppb). Respiratory symptoms were more common in children exposed to a gas stove (odds ratio 2.3 [95% CI 1. 0-5.2], adjusted for parental allergy, parental asthma, and sex). Nitrogen dioxide exposure was a marginal risk factor for respiratory symptoms, with a dose-response association present (p = 0.09). Gas stove exposure was a significant risk factor for respiratory symptoms even after adjusting for nitrogen dioxide levels (odds ratio 2.2 [1.0-4.8]), suggesting an additional risk apart from the average nitrogen dioxide exposure associated with gas stove use. Atopic children tended to have a greater risk of respiratory symptoms compared with nonatopic children with exposure to gas stoves or nitrogen dioxide, but the difference was not significant.
...
PMID:Respiratory symptoms in children and indoor exposure to nitrogen dioxide and gas stoves. 973 Oct 22

Acute exposure to air pollution is associated with increased respiratory symptoms and decreases in lung function in children. Respiratory symptoms in healthy children are usually nonspecific and not severe. Lower respiratory symptoms and extra use of bronchodilators will increase by about one-third with exposure to peak levels of ozone in children with asthma. Similarly, sulphates will increase the use of medication and decrease lung function in asthmatic children. Hospital and outpatient admissions for children with pre-existing asthma may be increased in the range of 20% with acute exposure to ambient ozone peaks and possibly with increased sulphur dioxide (SO2). Short-term nitrogen dioxide (NO2) exposure from indoor and outdoor sources has been associated with nonspecific respiratory symptoms and decreased lung function, again particularly in children with pre-existing asthma. No effect on hospital admissions has been documented. Chronic exposure to respirable particles, SO2 and NO2 is associated with up to three-fold increases in nonspecific chronic respiratory symptoms. Exposure to high traffic flow and, in particular, truck traffic and diesel exhaust leads to significant increases in respiratory symptoms and decreases in lung function, while no clear effect on the inception of asthma has been documented. It appears unlikely that long-term exposure to pollutants or irritants is responsible for the increase in asthma and allergy observed in many countries. However, although the effect of air pollution is small in most children, it has a significant influence on the health of children with pre-existing lung disease. Owing to the large number of individuals exposed this results in a considerable burden for the health system.
...
PMID:Environmental air pollution and lung disease in children. 1069 14

The effects of air pollution on asthmatic symptoms were assessed in a prospective cohort study of 3,049 schoolchildren in 8 different communities in Japan. Respiratory symptoms in these children were evaluated by questionnaires every year from the 1st through the 6th grades. The prevalence of asthma among the 1st graders was strongly associated with a history of allergic or respiratory diseases, but it was not associated with concentrations of air pollution. During the follow-up period, incidence rates of asthma were associated significantly with atmospheric concentrations of nitrogen dioxide. Particulate matter less than 10 microm in diameter (PM10) was also associated with a higher incidence of asthma, although the association was not significant. These findings suggest that air pollution, including nitrogen dioxide, may be an important factor in the development of asthma among children in urban districts.
...
PMID:Effects of air pollution on the prevalence and incidence of asthma in children. 1269 49


1