Differential respiratory health effects from the 2008 northern California wildfires: A spatiotemporal approach.

Differential respiratory health effects from the 2008 northern California wildfires: A spatiotemporal approach.

Environ Res. 2016 Jun 15;150:227-235

Authors: Reid CE, Jerrett M, Tager IB, Petersen ML, Mann JK, Balmes JR

Abstract
We investigated health effects associated with fine particulate matter during a long-lived, large wildfire complex in northern California in the summer of 2008. We estimated exposure to PM2.5 for each day using an exposure prediction model created through data-adaptive machine learning methods from a large set of spatiotemporal data sets. We then used Poisson generalized estimating equations to calculate the effect of exposure to 24-hour average PM2.5 on cardiovascular and respiratory hospitalizations and ED visits. We further assessed effect modification by sex, age, and area-level socioeconomic status (SES). We observed a linear increase in risk for asthma hospitalizations (RR=1.07, 95% CI=(1.05, 1.10) per 5µg/m(3) increase) and asthma ED visits (RR=1.06, 95% CI=(1.05, 1.07) per 5µg/m(3) increase) with increasing PM2.5 during the wildfires. ED visits for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) were associated with PM2.5 during the fires (RR=1.02 (95% CI=(1.01, 1.04) per 5µg/m(3) increase) and this effect was significantly different from that found before the fires but not after. We did not find consistent effects of wildfire smoke on other health outcomes. The effect of PM2.5 during the wildfire period was more pronounced in women compared to men and in adults, ages 20-64, compared to children and adults 65 or older. We also found some effect modification by area-level median income for respiratory ED visits during the wildfires, with the highest effects observed in the ZIP codes with the lowest median income. Using a novel spatiotemporal exposure model, we found some evidence of differential susceptibility to exposure to wildfire smoke.

PMID: 27318255 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

View full post on pubmed: asthma

ASTHMA:Claim of over-diagnosis can be wrong approach – The Guardian Charlottetown


The Guardian Charlottetown

ASTHMA:Claim of over-diagnosis can be wrong approach
The Guardian Charlottetown
Our four-year-old son was diagnosed with asthma. He was constantly sick with colds, always congested in his nose and his chest; he coughs when he runs. Sometimes, he gets out of breath and has to stop running. His doctor gave him two puffers which he …

View full post on asthma – Google News

Asthma: Claim of over-diagnosis can be wrong approach – The Guardian Charlottetown


The Guardian Charlottetown

Asthma: Claim of over-diagnosis can be wrong approach
The Guardian Charlottetown
Our four-year-old son was diagnosed with asthma. He was constantly sick with colds, always congested in his nose and his chest; he coughs when he runs. Sometimes, he gets out of breath and has to stop running. His doctor gave him two puffers which he …

View full post on asthma – Google News

Superheroes to the rescue: A creative approach to educating kids about asthma – Scope (blog)


Scope (blog)

Superheroes to the rescue: A creative approach to educating kids about asthma
Scope (blog)
Asthma affects more than 6 million children and leads to approximately 1.8 million visits to the emergency room annually in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In order to effectively manage asthma and help …

View full post on asthma – Google News

‘Iggy and the Inhalers’: Doctors Take Creative Approach to Educate Patients … – NBCNews.com

'Iggy and the Inhalers': Doctors Take Creative Approach to Educate Patients
NBCNews.com
Broncho the Bronchodilator? Coltron the Controller? It's Iggy and the Inhalers to the rescue! When Dr. Alex Thomas noticed that children and their parents often struggled to understand asthma and sometimes confused the different types of medications

View full post on asthma – Google News

Researcher: Blanket Approach to Asthma not Ideal – Drug Discovery & Development


Drug Discovery & Development

Researcher: Blanket Approach to Asthma not Ideal
Drug Discovery & Development
Associate Professor Simon Phipps. Source: University of Queensland University of Queensland research into the effects of dust mite and cockroach allergens has found that different types of asthma respond differently to a new experimental treatment.

View full post on asthma – Google News

Blanket approach to asthma treatment not ideal, researchers find – Medical Xpress


Medical Xpress

Blanket approach to asthma treatment not ideal, researchers find
Medical Xpress
Obstruction of the lumen of a bronchiole by mucoid exudate, goblet cell metaplasia, and epithelial basement membrane thickening in a person with asthma. Credit: Yale Rosen/Wikipedia/CC BY-SA 2.0. University of Queensland research into the effects of …

and more »

View full post on asthma – Google News

A systems approach to understanding human rhinovirus and influenza virus infection.

Related Articles

A systems approach to understanding human rhinovirus and influenza virus infection.

Virology. 2015 Oct 1;486:146-157

Authors: Kim TK, Bheda-Malge A, Lin Y, Sreekrishna K, Adams R, Robinson MK, Bascom CC, Tiesman JP, Isfort RJ, Gelinas R

Abstract
Human rhinovirus and influenza virus infections of the upper airway lead to colds and the flu and can trigger exacerbations of lower airway diseases including asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Novel diagnostic and therapeutic targets are still needed to differentiate between the cold and the flu, since the clinical course of influenza can be severe while that of rhinovirus is usually more mild. In our investigation of influenza and rhinovirus infection of human respiratory epithelial cells, we used a systems approach to identify the temporally changing patterns of host gene expression from these viruses. After infection of human bronchial epithelial cells (BEAS-2B) with rhinovirus, influenza virus or co-infection with both viruses, we studied the time-course of host gene expression changes over three days. We modeled host responses to these viral infections with time and documented the qualitative and quantitative differences in innate immune activation and regulation.

PMID: 26437235 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

View full post on pubmed: asthma