Respiratory Problems
Plague Kids With Asthma
Respiratory infections, not air pollution,
cause a significant worsening of health problems in winter for
children with asthma, according to researchers at National Jewish
Medical and Research Center.
The three-year study tracked more
than 140 children in Denver, aged 6 to 12, with moderate to severe
asthma during successive winters. It found that particulate air
pollution in winter didn't cause a major worsening of the children's
asthma.
However, upper respiratory infections
in the winter were associated with a significant decline in lung
function, asthma symptoms, and asthma exacerbations.
"In our study, wintertime
air pollution had no significant effect on asthma exacerbations
or lung function. Upper respiratory functions, however, doubled
the chances that a child would suffer an asthma exacerbation and
more than quadrupled the odds that a child would suffer asthma
symptoms," study author and pediatric allergist Dr. Nathan
Rabinovitch said in a prepared statement.
The study appears in the November
issue of the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
"It is well known that upper
respiratory infections can cause problems for people with asthma,
but the air pollution results were a surprise," study co-author
Dr. Erwin Gelfand, chairman of pediatrics at National Jewish,
said in a prepared statement.
"We believe that careful monitoring
of the children allowed us to filter out confounding factors that
would have mistakenly suggested a significant health impact of
air pollution," Gelfand said.
Rabinovitch said the study findings
offer good news for parents of children with asthma.
"Instead of worrying about
air pollution, they can focus their efforts on preventing and
treating the real wintertime threat to their children's health
-- colds and other respiratory infections," Rabinovitch said.
More information
The American Academy of Family
Physicians has more about asthma
flare-ups.
Reference
Source 101
November 12, 2004
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