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Atopy influences exhaled nitric oxide levels in adult asthmatics

Authors :
Fraser T. Wood
Ling-Pei Ho
Andrew Robson
Andrew P. Greening
J. Alastair Innes
Source :
Chest. 118(5)
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVE: To examine whether atopy influences exhaled nitric oxide (NO) levels in adults with established asthma. SETTING: Specialist respiratory unit in a university teaching hospital. PATIENTS: Twenty-eight asthmatics (mean FEV(1), 85.7%) receiving short-acting inhaled bronchodilators and a range of inhaled steroids (0 to 4,000 microg/d). INTERVENTIONS: Subjects were studied on two occasions, 5 to 7 days apart, between September and March. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: On the first day, FEV(1), exhaled NO, and histamine challenge were performed. On the second day, exhaled NO, total IgE, and skin-prick testing to six common allergens were conducted. Exhaled NO was measured with the single exhalation method. We found exhaled NO levels to correlate positively with total IgE (r = 0.43, p = 0.02) and number of positive skin-prick tests (p = 0. 002). By contrast, there was no significant correlation between exhaled NO and FEV(1) or the provocative concentration causing a 20% fall in FEV(1). Subanalyses of steroid-treated and steroid-naive patients in this group revealed the same findings. CONCLUSION: Exhaled NO levels in asthmatics correlate more closely with atopy than with bronchial hyperreactivity and lung function.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19313543 and 00123692
Volume :
118
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3816f430c81f1a303a45dd3881d07672