Afshar Majid, Poole Jill A, Cao Guichan, Durazo Ramon, Cooper Richard C, Kovacs Elizabeth J, Sisson Joseph H
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Loyola University Chicago Health Sciences Campus, Maywood, IL; Department of Public Health Sciences, Stritch School of Medicine, Loyola University Chicago Health Sciences, Maywood, IL; Alcohol Research Program, Stritch School of Medicine, Loyola University Chicago Health Sciences, Maywood, IL.
Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, Sleep and Allergy, Department of Medicine, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE.
Chest. 2016 Jul;150(1):196-209. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2016.02.642. Epub 2016 Feb 19.
More than one-quarter of the US population qualify as excessive alcohol consumers. Alcohol use impacts several lung diseases, and heavy consumption has been associated with poor clinical outcomes. The fractional excretion of exhaled nitric oxide (Feno) has clinical implications in multiple airways diseases. We hypothesized that excessive alcohol intake is associated with lower Feno levels.
To test this hypothesis, we examined a sample consisting of 12,059 participants, aged 21 to 79 years, interviewed between 2007 and 2012 from the National Health and Examination Survey. Two valid Feno measurements that were reproducible were recorded. Alcohol questionnaire data were used to define the following alcohol groups: never drinkers, nonexcessive drinkers, excessive drinkers, and former excessive drinkers. The natural logarithm of Feno values [ln(Feno)] as well as blood eosinophil count and C-reactive protein were used as dependent variables to test the association with alcohol groups including multivariable linear regression models with adjustment for predictors of Feno.
Excessive alcohol consumption comprised 3,693 (26.9%) of the US sample population. Controlling for all other factors, excessive alcohol consumption had a negative association and was an independent predictor for ln(Feno) levels in comparison with the never-drinker group (-0.11; 95% CI, -0.17 to -0.06; P < .001). ln(Feno) levels decreased across categories of increasing alcohol use (P < .001).
Accounting for alcohol use in the interpretation of Feno levels should be an additional consideration, and further investigations are warranted to explore the complex interaction between alcohol and nitric oxide in the airways.
超过四分之一的美国人口属于过度饮酒者。饮酒会影响多种肺部疾病,大量饮酒与不良临床结局相关。呼出一氧化氮分数(Feno)在多种气道疾病中具有临床意义。我们假设过量饮酒与较低的Feno水平相关。
为验证这一假设,我们对2007年至2012年间从国家健康与检查调查中选取的12059名年龄在21至79岁的参与者样本进行了研究。记录了两次可重复的有效Feno测量值。使用酒精调查问卷数据定义以下酒精摄入组:从不饮酒者、非过度饮酒者、过度饮酒者和既往过度饮酒者。将Feno值的自然对数[ln(Feno)]以及血液嗜酸性粒细胞计数和C反应蛋白用作因变量,以检验与酒精摄入组的关联,包括对Feno预测因素进行调整的多变量线性回归模型。
在美国样本人群中,过度饮酒者有3693人(占26.9%)。在控制所有其他因素后,与从不饮酒组相比,过度饮酒与ln(Feno)水平呈负相关,且是ln(Feno)水平的独立预测因素(-0.11;95%置信区间,-0.17至-0.06;P <.001)。ln(Feno)水平随着酒精摄入量增加的类别而降低(P <.001)。
在解释Feno水平时应额外考虑酒精摄入情况,有必要进一步研究以探索酒精与气道中一氧化氮之间的复杂相互作用。