Reactivity to Cold-Air Hyperventilation in Normal and in Asthmatic Children in a Survey of 5,697 Schoolchildren in Southern Bavaria
- 1 March 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Review of Respiratory Disease
- Vol. 147 (3) , 565-572
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/147.3.565
Abstract
The measurement of bronchial hyperreactivity (BHR) may give additional information to questionnaire-based studies of asthma prevalence. It is desirable to have a provocation method with high specificity that avoids the use of pharmacologic provocations in large numbers of healthy children. It was the aim of this study to establish a range of values for responsiveness to cold-air challenge in normal children, to describe its specificity and sensitivity for a diagnosis of asthma in a large unselected sample of schoolchildren in a field study, and to measure factors associated with hyperresponsiveness. All fourth-grade schoolchildren (9 to 11 yr of age) in Munich and several southern Bavarian communities (n = 9,403) were surveyed with a questionnaire (response rate, 87%), baseline lung function, and cold-air hyperventilation challenge (n = 5,697). A diagnosis of asthma was reported in 7.9% of children. In the reference group, the ninety-fifth percentile (%ile) for the change of FEV1 (DFEV,) was −9.0%; the 90%ile was −7.3%. Asymptomatic children fulfilling all criteria for the reference group showed a significantly increased reactivity if they had a family history of asthma (p = 0.038). With a cutoff for DFEV1 of −9.0% or −7.3% the respective sensitivities to “detect” a diagnosis of asthma were 21.6 and 30.7%, and for asthma with symptoms during the previous 12 months it was 26.2 and 35.1%. Reactivity to cold air increased with the number of episodes of asthma in the previous 12 months. In a multiple linear regression model, factors associated with increased reactivity to cold air were diagnosed asthma, hay fever, male sex, younger age, and a positive skin test. A comparison with other population-based studies in children suggests that cold air has a lower sensitivity than does histamine (30.7% versus 52%), with a specificity of close to 90% for both methods.Keywords
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