Objective: To determine whether measurement of airways responsiveness to methacholine can help physicians diagnose asthma in children.
Methods: Children from the 1995 Manitoba birth cohort were assessed by asthma specialists, had skin testing and measurement of airways responsiveness to methacholine (PC20). We selected children with doctor-diagnosed asthma and healthy children as controls (no asthma, no allergic rhinitis, negative skin tests).
The exact relationship between lymphomatoid granulomatosis (LyG) and posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLDs) is not clear. Both are observed in immunodeficient patients and are Epstein-Barr virus driven. These disorders are, however, considered distinct based upon the immune response elicited; LyG is T-cell rich while PTLDs are T-cell poor.
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