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The relationship between asthma and obesity in children: is it real or a case of over diagnosis?

Authors :
David Shoseyov
David Feigenbaum
Ronit Peled
Haim Bibi
Michael Friger
Shimon Sharff
Marina Genis
Source :
The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma. 41(4)
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

To determine whether obesity among children is associated with an increased incidence of asthma.Five thousand nine hundred eighty-four children participated in a lung health study in the Ashkelon region, Israel. A lung health questionnaire was completed and they underwent spirometry. Body mass index (BMI) was then calculated for each child.Three hundred two children (5.05%) were above the 95th percentile for BMI and considered obese. Obese children tended to wheeze more than the non-obese children 14.5% vs. 10.5%, respectively (p0.038). Asthma (physician diagnosis) was diagnosed more often among obese children than non-obese 7.2% vs. 3.9%, respectively (p0.008). Inhaler use was more prevalent among obese children than non-obese 15.9% vs. 8.8%, respectively (p0.001). Bronchial hyperreactivity was significantly greater among the non-obese asthmatic children compared with their obese counterparts, 352 (51.4%) vs. 10 (27.8%), respectively (p0.001). Chest symptoms and asthma were more frequent in obese than non-obese boys.Asthma, wheezing, and inhaler use were more common in obese children than in non-obese children. Symptoms were more prevalent among obese boys. Increasing BMI among children is a risk factor for asthma, which may in reality be obesity-related chest symptoms that mimic asthma.

Details

ISSN :
02770903
Volume :
41
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....deed480b7f1daacaaa8034193c64cb0b