Asthma vs. Non-Specific Reversible Airflow Obstruction: Clinical Features and Responsiveness to Anticholinergic Drugs
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Respiration
- Vol. 45 (3) , 237-242
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000194624
Abstract
Subjects (85) with 20% reversibility in FEV1 [force expiratory volume in 1 s] were classified into the categories of asthma (55 patients) and non-specific airflow obstruction (30 patients), respectively, on the basis of the presence or absence of eosinophilia (in the blood or sputum). Asthmatics were further subdivided into the atopic and non-atopic subgroups, respectively, on the basis of skin prick tests. Clinically, paroxysmal nocturnal wheezing was more significantly associated with asthma than with non-specific airflow obstruction. Atopic asthmatics were distinguished from patients with non-specific airflow obstruction by their younger age at presentation and at onset of obstructive symptoms, by a history of allergic provocation of wheezing, a family history of asthma and other atopic diseases, and by a lower incidence of mucus hypersecretion. The last 3 symptoms also distinguished atopic from non-atopic asthma. Unlike patients with non-atopic asthma or patients with non-specific airflow obstruction, atopic asthmatics had a significant impairment of bronchodilator responsiveness to inhaled anticholinergic drugs.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: