Publications by authors named "Sami T Remes"

Article Synopsis
  • Scientists are looking at how immunotherapy might help prevent asthma in kids and decided to check old study results about allergies and breathing problems in children.
  • In a 1994 study in Finland, they tested 247 children, some with breathing issues and others who were healthy, to see how allergies affected their lung function.
  • They found that kids with allergies showed more bronchial hyperresponsiveness (which means their airways reacted more) than those without symptoms, but it didn’t change breathing tests for those who were healthy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aim: There is a need for markers of Th1 and Th2 imbalance in diseases such as asthma. CD30 is an activation marker of Th2 cells, and importance of Th1 marker CD26 was recently found in adult asthma. We studied whether serum-soluble CD30 (sCD30) or serum-soluble CD26 (sCD26) could support early diagnosis of asthma in children at school age.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There are only a few studies which have assessed the impact of asthma on the quality of life (QoL) compared to healthy children. In this study we wanted to compare QoL between asthmatic and healthy children in a population based setting. We surveyed 2159 children aged 11-15 yr with a Child Health Questionnaire; a generic QoL measure for children.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The prevalence of childhood asthma has increased throughout the last decades, but the reasons for the increase still remain unresolved. However, the debate has recently focused on the role of infections, and microbial exposure in general, in the development of childhood asthma. Many studies have suggested that there is an inverse relation between certain infections and the risk of asthma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Portable hand-held spirometers are widely used in outpatient clinics and in field surveys when examining children for asthma. However, the validity of the results obtained from the hand-held spirometers has not been assessed in population-based studies. We evaluated the agreement between the forced expiratory volume (FEV1) values got by the conventional flow volume spirometer (FVS) and the pocket-sized turbine spirometer (TS) at baseline and after exercise, among the 212 children screened for asthma and asthma-like symptoms from a population of 1633 school-aged children.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF