Back-to-school asthma attacks linked to common cold virus in children – Medical News Today


Medical News Today

Back-to-school asthma attacks linked to common cold virus in children
Medical News Today
Children with asthma are most likely to experience an attack at the start of the school year and after long breaks, and exacerbations appear to be linked to the common cold virus. These are the findings from research published in Proceedings of the
Study Ties School Calendar to Asthma Flare-Up…WebMD
Common Colds at School a Primary Driver of Asthma Hospitalizations for ChildrenUT News | The University of Texas at Austin
Cold viruses at school largely to blame for asthma hospitalizationsNews-Medical.net
MyStatesman.com
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Common genetic variation safeguards children from asthma – ScienceBlog.com (blog)


ScienceBlog.com (blog)

Common genetic variation safeguards children from asthma
ScienceBlog.com (blog)
Exhaled nitric oxide is a biomarker of airway inflammation; higher levels of it increase a child's risk of developing asthma. Children with a common variation of “NOS2,” the primary gene that produces nitric oxide in airways, tend to have lungs that

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Common cold, asthma on the rise as winter sets in – Times of India

Common cold, asthma on the rise as winter sets in
Times of India
Meerut: With the onset of winter, a surge in patients complaining of viral infections, sore throat and breathing problems has been witnessed at different city hospitals. With cold air a major trigger for asthma-related problems, TOI talks to city
Common cold, asthma on the rise as winter sets in | Meerut NYOOOZNYOOOZ

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How Your Anxiety Could Aggravate This Other Common Health Issue – Refinery29


Lung Disease News

How Your Anxiety Could Aggravate This Other Common Health Issue
Refinery29
For the study, presented at the annual meeting of the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies, researchers recruited 101 participants who had exercise-induced asthma. The researchers first measured their participants' levels of anxiety
Study Presented at ABCT Annual Convention Shows Anxiety Sensitivity is Lung Disease News

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Beliefs about medication predict the misattribution of a common symptom as a medication side effect – Evidence from an analogue online study.

Related Articles

Beliefs about medication predict the misattribution of a common symptom as a medication side effect – Evidence from an analogue online study.

J Psychosom Res. 2015 Oct 13;

Authors: Heller MK, Chapman SC, Horne R

Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Some perceived medication side effects may be ‘normal’ symptoms that patients misattribute to the medication. Using an analogue approach, we tested if medication beliefs predict whether participants misattribute a headache as a side effect and subsequently intend to stop medication.
METHODS: We recruited 690 participants, 223 reporting a past asthma diagnosis. They received information about asthma and Molair, a fictitious asthma treatment modeled on a licensed treatment (montelukast). We varied the description of efficacy and side effects (which did not include headache). Pre-exposure to this information, participants completed the Beliefs about Medicine Questionnaire (BMQ)-General and the Perceived Sensitivity to Medicines Scale (PSM), post-exposure they completed the BMQ-Specific. Participants were asked to imagine they experienced a headache while taking Molair. Finally, they rated whether the headache was a side effect (misattribution) and if they would stop taking Molair (behavioral intention).
RESULTS: Nearly a quarter (170) of participants misattributed the headache to Molair and 69 (10%) subsequently intended to stop Molair. Both outcomes were predicted by general and specific medication beliefs. Odds of misattribution (m) and behavioral intention (i) increased with higher General Harm (ORm=1.90, ORi=2.72), General Overuse (ORm=1.74, ORi=1.56) and Molair Concern beliefs (ORm=1.52, ORi=1.78, all p<.01), but decreased with General Benefit (ORm=0.72, ORi=0.53) and Molair Necessity beliefs (ORm=0.72, ORi=0.70, all p<.05).
CONCLUSION: Symptom misattribution and subsequent intentions to stop Molair were predicted by pre-exposure beliefs about medicines in general and post-exposure beliefs about Molair. Patients with negative medication beliefs may be prone to misattribute symptoms and subsequently stop medication.

PMID: 26519128 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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This Common Asthma Drug Made Old Rats Act Like Young Rats Again – Motherboard


Daily Star

This Common Asthma Drug Made Old Rats Act Like Young Rats Again
Motherboard
The latest stride toward immortality was unveiled last week at the Society for Neuroscience conference in Chicago, where a team of researchers presented findings that demonstrated how a common asthma medication can be repurposed to encourage …
Alzheimer's breakthrough? Hay fever drug rejuvenates the brain and REVERSES Express.co.uk
Wonder drug could slow and even STOP ageingDaily Star

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Asthma, COPD and bronchitis: Key differences in common respiratory diseases – Bel Marra Health


Bel Marra Health

Asthma, COPD and bronchitis: Key differences in common respiratory diseases
Bel Marra Health
The differences between asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, are often more clear once risk factors are examined. Risk factors for asthma are different from risk factors for COPD. With asthma the primary risk factors include
The asthma-COPD overlap syndrome: a new entity?7thSpace Interactive (press release)

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Genetics of allergy and allergic sensitization: common variants, rare mutations.

Related Articles

Genetics of allergy and allergic sensitization: common variants, rare mutations.

Curr Opin Immunol. 2015 Sep 16;36:115-126

Authors: Bønnelykke K, Sparks R, Waage J, Milner JD

Abstract
Our understanding of the specific genetic lesions in allergy has improved in recent years due to identification of common risk variants from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and studies of rare, monogenic diseases. Large-scale GWAS have identified novel susceptibility loci and provided information about shared genetics between allergy, related phenotypes and autoimmunity. Studies of monogenic diseases have elucidated critical cellular pathways and protein functions responsible for allergy. These complementary approaches imply genetic mechanisms involved in Th2 immunity, T-cell differentiation, TGF? signaling, regulatory T-cell function and skin/mucosal function as well as yet unknown mechanisms associated with newly identified genes. Future studies, in combination with data on gene expression and epigenetics, are expected to increase our understanding of the pathogenesis of allergy.

PMID: 26386198 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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