학술논문

Variations in Exhaled Nitric Oxide in Children with Asthma During a 1-Week Stay in a Mountain Village Sanatorium.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Asthma. Aug2008, Vol. 45 Issue 6, p453-458. 6p. 3 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*NITRIC oxide
*ASTHMA in children
*PEDIATRIC respiratory diseases
*ADRENOCORTICAL hormones
*SPIROMETRY
*PULMONARY function tests
*ASTHMATICS
Language
ISSN
0277-0903
Abstract
Knowing about spontaneous variations in the fractional concentration of exhaled nitric oxide (FENO) could improve monitoring of airway inflammation in asthmatic children. We aimed to assess FENO variations (expiratory flow 50 mL/sec) in subjects maintained in similar environmental conditions. We tested spirometry and FENO in symptom-free asthmatic children (9 corticosteroid-naive, 8 corticosteroid-treated) during a 1-week stay in a countryside sanatorium and in their healthy relatives (n = 12) staying in the immediate neighborhood on summer holiday (total 29 children, M/F:14/15, 5.8-16.8 yrs). Testing sessions were repeated every 12 hours (8:00 am, 8:00 pm) for 2 days and again on day 7. Measurements were defined as reproducible when they agreed with an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) above 0.60; deviation from mean differences was assessed by the coefficient of repeatability (CR = 2 SD). Lung function remained constant throughout the week in all groups. Baseline FENO levels in corticosteroid-naive asthmatic children tended to decrease at the end of the week (from 13.9 ppb, 95% CI 12.2-19.1 to 9.2 ppb, 95% CI 5.8-15.9, p = 0.057). No differences were found between nocturnal and diurnal FENO. Within-session reproducibility for two FENO measurements was high (ICC 0.99 in all groups and CR, 0.9 to 1.3 ppb). Between-session FENO reproducibility at 12 hours and 24 hours was still high for each group but decreased markedly after 6 days in corticosteroid-naive asthmatic children (ICC 0.79 and CR 9.6 ppb at 24 hours vs. ICC 0.13 and CR 20.8 ppb after 6 days), whereas it decreased slightly in corticosteroid-treated asthmatics (from ICC 0.89 and CR 3.1 ppb to ICC 0.88 and CR 3.0 ppb) and healthy children (from ICC 0.79 and CR 4.8 ppb to ICC 0.65 and CR 5.7 ppb). In conclusion, in healthy subjects and in asthmatic children receiving therapy with inhaled corticosteroids (but not in corticosteroid-naive subjects), FENO measurements are reproducible across a week. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]