Background: Different interfaces (mouthpiece/nose clip vs. facemask) are used during multiple breath washout (MBW) tests in young children.
Methods: We investigated the effect of interface choice and breathing modalities on MBW outcomes in healthy adults and preschool children.
Background And Objective: Small airway dysfunction is associated with asthma severity and control, but its association with airway inflammation is unknown. The aim was to determine the association between sputum inflammatory cells and the site of small airway dysfunction, measured by multiple breath nitrogen washout in convection-dependent (Scond) and more peripheral diffusion-dependent (Sacin) airways.
Methods: Fifty-three (20-67 years) subjects with asthma on inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) treatment were characterized by spirometry, Scond, Sacin and induced sputum differential counts.
Respir Physiol Neurobiol
October 2013
Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) occurs in both asthma and COPD. In older people with asthma, AHR is associated with increased acinar ventilation heterogeneity, but it is unknown if this association exists in COPD. Thirty one COPD and 19 age-matched asthmatic subjects had measures of spirometry, lung volumes, exhaled nitric oxide, ventilation heterogeneity, and methacholine challenge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Allergy Clin Immunol
February 2012
Background: The clinical relevance of increased ventilation heterogeneity, a marker of small-airways disease, in asthmatic patients is unclear. Ventilation heterogeneity is an independent determinant of airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), improves with bronchodilators and inhaled corticosteroids (ICSs), and worsens during exacerbations, but its relationship to asthma control is unknown.
Objective: We sought to determine the association between ventilation heterogeneity and current asthma control before and after ICS treatment.
Rationale: The mechanisms of airway hyper-responsiveness are only partially understood and the contribution of airway remodelling is unknown. Airway remodelling can be assessed by measuring airway distensibility, which is reduced in asthma, even when lung function is normal. We hypothesised that airway remodelling contributes to airway hyper-responsiveness in asthma, independent of steroid-responsive airway inflammation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Age-related increases in morbidity and mortality due to asthma may be due to changes in pathophysiology as patients with asthma get older. There is limited knowledge about the effects of age on the predictors of airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), a key feature of asthma. The aim of this study was to determine if the pathophysiologic predictors of AHR, including inflammation, ventilation heterogeneity, and airway closure, differed between young and old patients with asthma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: It is unclear why obesity is associated with worse asthma control. We hypothesized that (1) obesity affects asthma control independent of spirometry, airway inflammation, and airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) and (2) residual symptoms after resolution of inflammation are due to obesity-related changes in lung mechanics.
Methods: Forty-nine subjects with asthma underwent the following tests, before and after 3 months of high-dose inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) treatment: five-item asthma control questionnaire (ACQ-5), spirometry, fraction of exhaled nitric oxide (Feno), methacholine challenge, and the forced oscillation technique, which allows for the calculation of respiratory system resistance (Rrs) and respiratory system reactance (Xrs) as indicators of airway caliber and elastic load, respectively.