GERD Associated With Worse Infant Respiratory Disease – Family Practice News Digital Network

GERD Associated With Worse Infant Respiratory Disease
Family Practice News Digital Network
Bronchiolitis is a prominent risk factor for childhood asthma, and GERD is associated with worsened asthma severity (J. Asthma 2011;48:366-73). As yet unknown is whether preexisting GERD (clinically significant reflux) in infants modulates the severity

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Asthma Study: Asthma Sufferers Trapped with Disease

The course of asthma activity: A population study

A recent asthma activity population study suggests that once you’ve been diagnosed with asthma, you’re trapped with the disease for life.

According to published reports in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology research conducted from 1993 to 2008 by scientists at Ontario’s Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) studied 613,394 people with asthma. Eighty-two per cent of participants continued to have active asthma through the study.

For nearly 75 per cent of that group, the condition seemed inactive for years.

“Over 15 years, most individuals with asthma in Ontario were found to have active disease which was interspersed by periods of inactivity when they did not seek medical attention and were likely in remission,” states Dr. Andrea Gershon in a news release. Gershon is a respirologist and scientist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto, and the study’s lead author.

“These analyses offer insight into the natural course of asthma activity that may help improve the ability to predict an individual’s course of disease.”

Children, seniors, and those diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) were more likely to have active asthma.

Asthma patients may benefit from book’s seven principles for managing disease – Washington Post

Asthma patients may benefit from book's seven principles for managing disease
Washington Post
Asthma help Steps for dealing with wheezing and worse “Beating Asthma,” Salveo Media Millions of people struggle with asthma, and though it can't be cured, pediatrician and allergist Stephen Apaliski provides seven principles to help control it.

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Heavy soda drinking linked to lung disease – Clinical Advisor

Heavy soda drinking linked to lung disease
Clinical Advisor
Participants who drank at least half a liter of soda per day were more than twice as likely to develop asthma or COPD than those who consumed no soft drinks at all (odds ratio=2.33; 95% C: 1.51-3.60), Zumin Shi, MD, PhD, from the University of Adelaide
Lung problems made worse by soft drinksNew Zealand Herald

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