Little Stinkers: Patients Report Worsening Asthma and Allergy Symptoms around … – Centre Daily Times

Little Stinkers: Patients Report Worsening Asthma and Allergy Symptoms around
Centre Daily Times
There's not a lot of public information about it," says Nancy Sander, founder and president of Allergy & Asthma Network Mothers of Asthmatics (AANMA), the leading national family-founded nonprofit organization for people with asthma, allergies and

and more »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Little Stinkers: Patients Report Worsening Asthma and Allergy Symptoms around … – PR Newswire (press release)

Little Stinkers: Patients Report Worsening Asthma and Allergy Symptoms around
PR Newswire (press release)
There's not a lot of public information about it," says Nancy Sander, founder and president of Allergy & Asthma Network Mothers of Asthmatics (AANMA), the leading national family-founded nonprofit organization for people with asthma, allergies and

and more »

View full post on asthma – Google News

Environmental risk factors for respiratory symptoms and childhood asthma.

Environmental risk factors for respiratory symptoms and childhood asthma.

Ann Agric Environ Med. 2010 Dec;17(2):221-9

Authors: Kasznia-Kocot J, Kowalska M, Gorny R, Niesler A, Wypych-Slusarska A

The presented cross-sectional study, comprised a group of 1,130 children from 13-15 years of age living in Upper Silesia, Poland, was undertaken to ascertain the role of environmental factors in the development of adverse respiratory health outcomes. To estimate the prevalence of these effects, the ISAAC questionnaire supplemented by questions related to risk factors was used. Bronchial asthma was identified in 4.5 percent of the children, asthma diagnosed by physicians in 8.7 percent, and prevalence of wheezing in the previous 12 months in 12.6 percent. The highest probability of wheezing was found in children with maternal genetic propensity (such as asthma, allergy), exposed to maternal smoking, or was connected with household risk factors such as the presence of dampness/mould or living in 50-year-old building. Female gender and attendance at nursery school were shown to be protective factors against wheezing. The probability of asthma was nearly twice as high in children residing in damp/mouldy dwellings, heated by coal-fired furnaces and living in the immediate vicinity of a road with heavy traffic. This study revealed that exposure to indoor (tobacco smoke, coal stove emission, mould or dampness in dwelling) and outdoor (traffic pollution) air contaminants are major environmental factors responsible for adverse respiratory health effects in children.

PMID: 21186763 [PubMed – in process]

View full post on pubmed: asthma