Association Between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Pediatric Asthma … – Lung Disease News


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Association Between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Pediatric Asthma
Lung Disease News
Results from a recent study conducted by a research team at the Hasbro Children's Hospital revealed an association between adverse childhood experiences and pediatric asthma. According to the study recently published in the Annals of Allergy, Asthma …
Children exposed to adverse childhood experience more likely to develop asthmaNews-Medical.net
Gene may play part in how kids respond to asthma medsWSFA

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Possible Link Between Suicide Risk and Asthma – Atopy Focus of Recent Study – Lung Disease News


Lung Disease News

Possible Link Between Suicide Risk and Asthma – Atopy Focus of Recent Study
Lung Disease News
Asthma and atopy, the genetic tendency to develop allergic diseases, have been suggested to be associated with a higher risk of suicide ideation and depression. Bristol researchers have studied this possible link between pre-defined asthma and atopy …

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UC Researchers examine relationship between asthma and mental health – The News Record


The News Record

UC Researchers examine relationship between asthma and mental health
The News Record
The Health and Anxiety Psychopathology Laboratory at the University of Cincinnati, which studies the connections between mental and physical health, is conducting ongoing research focused on individuals with asthma and how anxiety or depression can …

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The association between asthma and rhinitis is stable over time despite diverging trends in prevalence.

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The association between asthma and rhinitis is stable over time despite diverging trends in prevalence.

Respir Med. 2015 Jan 21;

Authors: Bjerg A, Eriksson J, Ólafsdóttir IS, Middelveld R, Franklin K, Forsberg B, Larsson K, Torén K, Dahlén SE, Janson C

Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the well-known association between asthma and rhinitis, in Swedish adults the prevalence of rhinitis rose from 22% to 31% between 1990 and 2008 while asthma prevalence was unchanged. We tested whether the association of rhinitis with asthma was stable over time using the same population-based databases.
METHODS: Two surveys of adults (20-44 years) living in three regions of Sweden, carried out in 1990 (n = 8982) and 2008 (n = 9156) were compared. Identical questions regarding respiratory symptoms, asthma and rhinitis were used. Asthmatic wheeze: Wheeze with breathlessness apart from colds. Current asthma: Asthma attacks and/or asthma medication use.
RESULTS: Subjects with rhinitis had level time trends in asthmatic wheeze, current asthma and most nocturnal respiratory symptoms between 1990 and 2008, adjusted for age, sex, area and smoking. Any wheeze however decreased slightly. In never-smokers asthma symptoms were similarly associated with rhinitis in 1990 and 2008: any wheeze OR 4.0 vs. 4.4 (p = 0.339); asthmatic wheeze OR 6.0 vs. 5.9 (p = 0.937); and current asthma OR 9.6 vs. 7.7 (p = 0.213). In the whole population there were decreases in the asthma symptoms most closely associated to smoking, which decreased by half 1990-2008. Conversely current asthma, which was strongly associated with rhinitis and not with smoking, increased (p < 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: The association of rhinitis with asthma was stable between 1990 and 2008. The pattern in the time trends of asthma outcomes strongly suggests that decreased smoking counterbalanced the driving effect of increased rhinitis on asthma prevalence. The findings illustrate the public health benefits of decreased smoking.

PMID: 25638411 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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