Lang Jason E, Hossain Md Jobayer, Lima John J
Division of Pulmonary & Sleep Medicine, Nemours Children's Hospital, Orlando, Fla.
Center for Pediatric Research, Alfred I. DuPont Hospital of Children, Wilmington, Del.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2015 Apr;135(4):886-893.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2014.08.029. Epub 2014 Oct 14.
Past studies of asthma in overweight/obese children have been inconsistent. The reason overweight/obese children commonly report worse asthma control remains unclear.
To determine qualitative differences in symptoms between lean and overweight/obese children with early-onset, atopic asthma.
We conducted a cross-sectional analytic study of lean (20% to 65% body mass index) and overweight/obese (≥85% body mass index) 10- to 17-year-old children with persistent, early-onset asthma. Participants completed 2 to 3 visits to provide a complete history, qualitative and quantitative asthma symptom characterization, and lung function testing. We determined associations between weight status and symptoms using multivariable linear and logistic regression methods.
Overweight/obese and lean asthmatic children displayed similar lung function. Despite lower fraction of exhaled nitric oxide (30.0 vs 62.6 ppb; P = .037) and reduced methacholine responsiveness (PC20FEV1 1.87 vs 0.45 mg/mL; P < .012), overweight/obese children reported more than thrice frequent rescue treatments (3.7 vs 1.1 treatments/wk; P = .0002) than did lean children. Weight status affected the child's primary symptom reported with loss of asthma control (Fisher exact test; P = .003); overweight/obese children more often reported shortness of breath (odds ratio = 11.8; 95% CI, 1.41-98.7) and less often reported cough (odds ratio = 0.26; 95% CI, 0.08-0.82). Gastroesophageal reflux scores were higher in overweight/obese children (9.6 vs 23.2; P = .003) and appear to mediate overweight/obesity-related asthma symptoms.
Overweight/obese children with early-onset asthma display poorer asthma control and a distinct pattern of symptoms. Greater shortness of breath and β-agonist use appears to be partially mediated via esophageal reflux symptoms. Overweight children with asthma may falsely attribute exertional dyspnea and esophageal reflux to asthma, leading to excess rescue medication use.
过去关于超重/肥胖儿童哮喘的研究结果并不一致。超重/肥胖儿童普遍报告哮喘控制较差的原因尚不清楚。
确定早发性特应性哮喘的消瘦儿童与超重/肥胖儿童在症状上的质性差异。
我们对10至17岁患有持续性早发性哮喘的消瘦(体重指数为20%至65%)和超重/肥胖(体重指数≥85%)儿童进行了一项横断面分析研究。参与者完成2至3次就诊,以提供完整病史、定性和定量哮喘症状特征以及肺功能测试。我们使用多变量线性和逻辑回归方法确定体重状况与症状之间的关联。
超重/肥胖哮喘儿童和消瘦哮喘儿童的肺功能相似。尽管超重/肥胖儿童呼出一氧化氮分数较低(30.0对62.6 ppb;P = 0.037)且对乙酰甲胆碱的反应性降低(PC20FEV1为1.87对0.45 mg/mL;P < 0.012),但超重/肥胖儿童报告的急救治疗频率比消瘦儿童高出三倍多(3.7次对1.1次/周;P = 0.0002)。体重状况影响哮喘控制不佳时儿童报告的主要症状(Fisher精确检验;P = 0.003);超重/肥胖儿童更常报告呼吸急促(比值比 = 11.8;95%置信区间,1.41 - 98.7),较少报告咳嗽(比值比 = 0.26;95%置信区间,0.08 - 0.82)。超重/肥胖儿童的胃食管反流评分较高(9.6对23.2;P = 0.003),且似乎介导了超重/肥胖相关的哮喘症状。
早发性哮喘的超重/肥胖儿童哮喘控制较差且症状模式独特。呼吸急促加剧和β受体激动剂使用增加似乎部分是由食管反流症状介导的。哮喘超重儿童可能将运动性呼吸困难和食管反流错误归因于哮喘,导致急救药物使用过量。