학술논문

Relationships between specific airway resistance and forced expiratory flows in asthmatic children.
Document Type
article
Source
PLoS ONE, Vol 4, Iss 4, p e5270 (2009)
Subject
Medicine
Science
Language
English
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The earliest changes associated with airflow obstruction in asthmatic children are a proportionally greater reduction in FEF(50%) than in FEV(1) using spirometry, and an increase in specific airway resistance (sRaw) using body plethysmography. Consequently, we hypothesized that sRaw could be better linked to FEF(50%) than to FEV(1). The first aim was to assess the relationships between forced expiratory flows and sRaw in a large group of asthmatic children in a transversal study. We then performed a longitudinal study in order to determine whether sRaw of preschool children could predict subsequent impairment of forced expiratory flows at school age. METHODOLOGY: Pulmonary function tests (sRaw and forced expiratory flows) of 2193 asthmatic children were selected for a transversal analysis, while 365 children were retrospectively selected for longitudinal assessment from preschool to school age. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The transversal data showed that sRaw is differently related to FEF(50%) (-1/sRaw) and to FEV(1) (near linearly). These results were further explained by a simple one-compartment lung model, which justified the shape of the observed relationships. As hypothesized, sRaw correlated more strongly to FEF(50%) than to FEV(1) (r = -0.64 versus -0.39, respectively; p