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Relationship between Bronchial Hyperresponsiveness and Impaired Lung Function after Infantile Asthma

Christophe Delacourt, Marie-Rose Benoist, Muriel Le Bourgeois, Serge Waernessyckle, Patrick Rufin, Jean-Jacques Brouard, Jacques de Blic and Pierre Scheinmann

PLOS ONE, 2007, vol. 2, issue 11, 1-6

Abstract: Wheezing during infancy has been linked to early loss of pulmonary function. We prospectively investigated the relation between bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR) and progressive impairment of pulmonary function in a cohort of asthmatic infants followed until age 9 years. We studied 129 infants who had had at least three episodes of wheezing. Physical examinations, baseline lung function tests and methacholine challenge tests were scheduled at ages 16 months and 5, 7 and 9 years. Eighty-three children completed follow-up. Twenty-four (29%) infants had wheezing that persisted at 9 years of age. Clinical outcome at age 9 years was significantly predicted by symptoms at 5 years of age and by parental atopy. Specific airway resistance (sRaw) was altered in persistent wheezers as early as 5 years of age, and did not change thereafter. Ninety-five per cent of the children still responded to methacholine at the end of follow-up. The degree of BHR at 9 years was significantly related to current clinical status, baseline lung function, and parental atopy. BHR at 16 months and 5 years of age did not predict persistent wheezing between 5 and 9 years of age, or the final degree of BHR, but it did predict altered lung function. Wheezing that persists from infancy to 9 years of age is associated with BHR and to impaired lung function. BHR itself is predictive of impaired lung function in children, strongly pointing to early airway remodeling in infantile asthma.

Date: 2007
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0001180

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001180

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