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      The relative importance of socio-economic status, parental smoking and air pollution (SO2) on asthma symptoms, spirometry and bronchodilator response in 11-year-old children.

      Pediatric Allergy and Immunology
      Adult, Air Pollutants, adverse effects, Asthma, epidemiology, physiopathology, Bronchodilator Agents, diagnostic use, Child, Female, Fenoterol, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Smoking, Social Class, Spirometry, Sulfur Dioxide

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          Abstract

          The aim of this study was to evaluate the relative contribution of several risk factors to the prevalence of allergic respiratory symptoms, and the positivity of the bronchodilator test with fenoterol, and to establish the relative importance of these factors on the variability of FVC, FEV1, PEF, MEF25, MEF50 and MEF75. A total of 340 11-year-old children attending school in polluted and non-polluted areas of the city of Cartagena, Spain, were studied. The polluted area had had an annual mean of 75 microg/m3 of SO2 over the last 10 years and the non-polluted area had < 20 microg/m3 during this period. A questionnaire about allergic respiratory symptoms was completed by the parents. Specific questions about parental smoking habits and socio-economic level were included. Each child's performance in spirometry before and after administration of 0.2 mg of inhaled fenoterol was evaluated. The only significant predictive variables in the logistic regression (for suffering any symptom or a positive bronchodilator response) were male sex for nasal symptoms (RR 1.37; p = 0.04) and housing near heavy traffic for eye symptoms (RR 1.45; p = 0.01). Living in the polluted area reduced the risk of a positive bronchodilator response (RR 0.61; p = 0.004). Maternal smoking, even though not statistically significant, tended to increased the risk of suffering any symptom (RR 1.26; p = 0.07) or of having a positive bronchodilator response (RR 1.23; p = 0.1). None of the risk factors studied was of significant importance in explaining the variability of spirometry results. Although none of the risk factors were specifically determinant to the symptom questions, bronchodilator test or spirometric measurements, having a mother who smokes seems more important than living in a polluted area if statistically non-significant trends are considered.

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          Most cited references14

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          Urban air pollution and emergency admissions for asthma in four European cities: the APHEA Project.

          A study was undertaken to assess the combined association between urban air pollution and emergency admissions for asthma during the years 1986-92 in Barcelona, Helsinki, Paris and London. Daily counts were made of asthma admissions and visits to the emergency room in adults (age range 15-64 years) and children (< 15 years). Covariates were short term fluctuations in temperature and humidity, viral epidemics, day of the week effects, and seasonal and secular trends. Estimates from all the cities were obtained for the entire period and separately by warm or cold seasons using Poisson time-series regression models. Combined associations were estimated using meta-analysis techniques. Daily admissions for asthma in adults increased significantly with increasing ambient levels of nitrogen dioxide (NO2) (relative risk (RR) per 50 micrograms/m3 increase 1.029, 95% CI 1.003 to 1.055) and non-significantly with particles measured as black smoke (RR 1.021, 95% CI 0.985 to 1.059). The association between asthma admissions and ozone (O3) was heterogeneous among cities. In children, daily admissions increased significantly with sulphur dioxide (SO2) (RR 1.075, 95% CI 1.026 to 1.126) and non-significantly with black smoke (RR 1.030, 95% CI 0.979 to 1.084) and NO2, though the latter only in cold seasons (RR 1.080, 95% CI 1.025 to 1.140). No association was observed for O3. The associations between asthma admissions and NO2 in adults and SO2 in children were independent of black smoke. The evidence of an association between air pollution at current urban levels and emergency room visits for asthma has been extended to Europe. In addition to particles, NO2 and SO2--by themselves or as a constituent of a pollution mixture--may be important in asthma exacerbations in European cities.
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            Changing prevalence of asthma in Australian children.

            To investigate whether prevalence of asthma in children increased in 10 years. Serial cross sectional studies of two populations of children by means of standard protocol. Two towns in New South Wales: Belmont (coastal and humid) and Wagga Wagga (inland and dry). Children aged 8-10 years: 718 in Belmont and 769 in Wagga Wagga in 1982; 873 in Belmont and 795 in Wagga Wagga in 1992. History of respiratory illness recorded by parents in self administered questionnaire; airway hyperresponsiveness by histamine inhalation test; atopy by skin prick tests; counts of house dust mites in domestic dust. Prevalence of wheeze in previous 12 months increased in Belmont, from 10.4% (75/718) in 1982 to 27.6% (240/873) in 1992 (P < 0.001), and in Wagga Wagga, from 15.5% (119/769) to 23.1% (183/795) (P < 0.001). The prevalence of airway hyperresponsiveness increased twofold in Belmont to 19.8% (173/873) (P < 0.001) and 1.4-fold in Wagga Wagga to 18.1% (P < 0.05). The prevalence of airway hyperresponsiveness increased mainly in atopic children only, but the prevalence of atopy was unchanged (about 28.5% in Belmont and about 32.5% in Wagga Wagga). Numbers of house dust mites increased 5.5-fold in Belmont and 4.5-fold in Wagga Wagga. We suggest that exposure to higher allergen levels has increased airway abnormalities in atopic children or that mechanisms that protected airways of earlier generations of children have been altered by new environmental factors.
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              Prevalence of asthma in Finnish young men.

              To determine the prevalence of asthma in cohorts of Finnish young men in the period 1926-89. A retrospective analysis using reports and statistics of Finnish defence forces. Call up examinations of candidates for military conscription and examination of conscripts discharged because of poor health. Roughly 900,000 men--that is, 98% of men of conscription age--examined in 1966-89 and a proportional but unknown number examined in 1926-61. Asthma recognised at call up examination, exemption from military service, and discharge from military service because of asthma. During 1926-61 the prevalence of asthma recorded at call up examinations remained steady at between 0.02% and 0.08%. Between 1961 and 1966, however, a continuous, linear rise began, the prevalence increasing from 0.29% in 1966 to 1.79% in 1989--that is, representing a sixfold increase. Compared with 1961 the rise was 20-fold. From 1966 to 1989 the sum of exemptions and discharges from military service due to asthma increased analogously sixfold. If the apparent increase in asthma detected in Finnish young men was due entirely to improved diagnostic methods and other confounding effects then some 95% of cases must have gone undiagnosed in the years before 1966. This seems inconceivable, which suggests that much of the increase was real. This conclusion is strengthened by the observed rise in exemptions and discharges due to asthma.
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