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Snoring
May Be Sign of Asthma in Kids
Excerpt
By
Merritt
McKinney, HealthDay
Children who snore may be much more likely to have asthma and
a nighttime cough than children who do not snore, says a new study
from Australia.
Doctors often use night cough as
a guide for diagnosing asthma in children, but the findings, which
appear in the August issue of Chest, suggest it may be
appropriate to treat the snoring first, says one of the study's
co-authors.
"Night cough is often taken
as a sign of the onset or development of asthma in a young child,"
says Dr. Colin E. Sullivan, a professor of medicine at the University
of Sydney. "Our study shows that such coughing might be being
triggered by the child's snoring."
"The study is really an important
step," says Dr. James L. Goodwin, an epidemiologist and research
assistant professor at the University of Arizona Respiratory Center
in Tucson.
Nighttime cough, Goodwin explains,
is often used to diagnose asthma in children, but the findings
suggest that in some cases snoring may be causing the coughing.
Although snoring may raise the
risk of night cough even in children who do not have asthma, Sullivan
notes that childhood asthma and snoring do appear to be linked,
pointing out that more than 40 percent of children who snored
had asthma, compared to about 26 percent of children who did not
snore.
"Snorers had almost a doubling
of the level of asthma," Sullivan says.
However, Sullivan says the study
"does not reveal the nature" of the link between snoring
and asthma.
"Because there is such a high
association between snoring and asthma, we think it is unlikely
that the link can be simply because of an association with the
more severe form of snoring." This condition, known as obstructive
sleep apnea, stops breathing dozens of times a night by causing
the upper airway to completely close during sleep.
"That has made us think that
snoring in its own right might be a trigger for asthma,"
Sullivan says.
Goodwin agrees, but he notes that
more research is needed to "tease out" the relationship
between asthma, snoring and nighttime cough.
The study included a total of 974
children aged 2 to 5 who lived in New South Wales, Australia.
Overall, nearly 11 percent of children snored.
Children who snored at least four
nights a week were much more likely to have night cough. While
just under 31 percent of all children in the study coughed during
the night, almost 62 percent of snoring children had a nighttime
cough.
Since night cough is often a symptom
of asthma, the researchers examined the link between snoring and
night cough in kids with and without the lung disease.
Among children who did not have
asthma, nighttime cough was twice as common in children who snored
than in those who did not. Similarly, children with asthma who
snored were much more likely to have a night cough than asthmatic
children who did not snore.
"We do not want to unnecessarily
concern parents about snoring, particularly as it is so common,"
Sullivan says.
"The first thing not to do
is panic and think one night of snoring or the occasional snore
-- which many children do -- means that they will have lots of
problems," Sullivan cautions. "That is not the case."
He advises parents to "calmly
observe" their children over several nights to see if snoring
is causing breathing difficulty.
"If they are clearly struggling
to breathe, are having episodes where they stop breathing, and
if they are restless and sweaty during the night, then there is
a high probability that they have the more severe form of snoring,
that of obstructive apnea, and they should consult their doctor,"
Sullivan advises.
If a child is a regular snorer,
but does not seem to be having breathing difficulties, then parents
need only "keep an eye on it" and let their doctor know
at their next check-up.
But if a child has other respiratory
symptoms, particularly asthma, "you should consider the possibility
that the otherwise ordinary snoring is making that asthma worse
and you should indicate this when your child is being reviewed
because of asthma," Sullivan says.
Goodwin adds that when a child
snores four to five nights a week and has other types of problems,
including learning difficulties, it is also a good idea to mention
the child's snoring to a physician.
More information
Try the American
Academy of Pediatrics for information on kids' sleeping problems.
The National
Sleep Foundation has a page on other sleep disorders.
Reference
Source 89
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