Young asthma sufferers in Australia face mental health risk – helpmeoutDOC News – A consistent flow of medical news


helpmeoutDOC News – A consistent flow of medical news

Young asthma sufferers in Australia face mental health risk
helpmeoutDOC News – A consistent flow of medical news
Young Australians with asthma face the risk exceeding 50 percent of having a mental illness, double the rate of the entire population in Australia, a new study suggests. Researchers used a survey of 533 volunteers, mostly females, aged between 12 and 25.
Asthma flares up mental health riskThe West Australian
Poorly managed asthma can harm mental health, researchers sayHerald Sun
Management key to living with asthmaNewcastle Herald
6minutes –SBS –Yahoo!7 News
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Risk of suicide for individuals reporting asthma and atopy in young adulthood: Findings from the Glasgow Alumni study.

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Risk of suicide for individuals reporting asthma and atopy in young adulthood: Findings from the Glasgow Alumni study.

Psychiatry Res. 2014 Dec 19;

Authors: Crawford AA, Galobardes B, Jeffreys M, Davey Smith G, Gunnell D

Abstract
There is emerging evidence that asthma and atopy may be associated with a higher risk of suicide. We investigated the association of asthma and atopy with mortality from suicide (n=32) in the Glasgow Alumni cohort, adjusting for the key confounders of socioeconomic position and smoking. We found no evidence of an association in our a priori atopy phenotypes with suicide, and there were insufficient suicides in the asthma phenotypes to draw any conclusions. In additional analyses, individuals reporting both eczema-urticaria and hay fever and those with family history of atopy were at higher risk of suicide. As these were secondary analyses and based on small numbers of events we cannot rule out chance findings. The lack of evidence in our main hypothesis may be due to the small number of suicides or reported associations between asthma and atopy may be confounded.

PMID: 25596956 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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Asthma sufferers, young more prone to enterovirus – Jackson Clarion Ledger


Jackson Clarion Ledger

Asthma sufferers, young more prone to enterovirus
Jackson Clarion Ledger
Children and young adults get the sickest, and it triggers attacks for people with asthma. Enterovirus symptoms are similar to a cold: fever, runny nose, sneezing, cough and body aches. Severe symptoms for asthma sufferers may include coughing
Protecting your children against Enterovirus D68Harvard Health Publications (blog)
How dangerous is this new respiratory enterovirus?Boston Globe
Kids with Asthma at Greatest Risk from EV-D68Wawa-news.com
Green Bay Press Gazette –Middleboro Gazette –Casper Journal
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Vitamin D reduces the differentiation and expansion of Th17 cells in young asthmatic children.

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Vitamin D reduces the differentiation and expansion of Th17 cells in young asthmatic children.

Immunobiology. 2014 Jul 22;

Authors: Hamzaoui A, Berraïes A, Hamdi B, Kaabachi W, Ammar J, Hamzaoui K

Abstract
Vitamin D [25(OH)D3] deficiency has been associated with asthma as in many inflammatory and autoimmune pathologies; however, there is still a lack of data about the effects of administration of vitamin D in immune regulation in young asthmatic patients. In this study, we investigated its inhibitory effect on the immune response in young asthmatic patients and the possible mechanisms involved. Peripheral blood CD4(+) T cells from 10 asthmatic patients and 10 healthy controls were cultured under Th17 polarizing conditions in the presence or absence of [25(OH)D3], IL-17 cytokine production was determined by ELISA and flow cytometry. Messenger RNA (mRNA) expression of several factors related to Th17 cell function was determined by real-time PCR. The effect of [25(OH)D3]-treated dendritic cells (DCs) on CD4(+) T cell response was determined by ELISA and flow cytometry. Stimulation of naive CD4(+) T cells under Th17 polarizing conditions showed a higher Th17 cell differentiation in asthmatic patients than healthy controls. The addition of [25(OH)D3] significantly inhibited Th17 cell differentiation both in patients [P<0.001] and in normal controls [P=0.001] in a dose-dependent way. [25(OH)D3] was able to inhibit the gene expression of RORC, IL-17, IL-23R, and CCR6. [25(OH)D3]-treated DCs significantly inhibited IL-17 production [P=0.002] and decreased the percentage of CD4(+)IL-17(+) [P=0.007] in young asthmatics. The findings suggest that the inhibitory effect of [25(OH)D3] on the Th17 response was mediated via both T cells and DCs. DCs pathway is involved in the direct inhibition of 25(OH)D3 on Th17 cell differentiation in young asthmatics.

PMID: 25128460 [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]

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EPA to study outdoor air pollutants’ effects on young blacks with asthma – Daily Caller

EPA to study outdoor air pollutants' effects on young blacks with asthma
Daily Caller
The EPA's ongoing “TEEN AIRE” study is looking to find out how “chemicals and dusts in the air outside, also known as outdoor air pollutants, affect asthma control in teens.” The EPA and the University of North Carolina School of Medicine are looking

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