Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 149, No. 5, 05 1994, 1198-1208.
Gender- and race-specific effects of asthma and wheeze on level and growth of lung function in children in six U.S. cities
DR Gold, D Wypij, X Wang, FE Speizer, M Pugh, JH Ware, BG Ferris Jr and DW Dockery
Department of Environmental Health, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
The gender-and race-specific effects of asthma/wheeze on pulmonary function
level and annual growth velocity were studied in a cohort of 10,792 white
and 944 black children 6 to 18 yr of age, examined annually between 1974
and 1989 in six U.S. cities. In comparison with white boys who never
reported asthma or wheeze, FEV1 levels were 5.7% lower and FEF 25-75 levels
were 16.9% lower for white boys with a diagnosis of asthma who reported
wheeze symptoms in the past year. White girls with asthma and wheeze had
FEV1 levels that were 3.4% lower and FEF25-75 levels that were 13.6% lower
than white girls with never- asthma/wheeze. Asthma with wheeze was
associated with a greater percent deficit in FEV1 level in boys than in
girls (p < 0.01) and, particularly in preadolescence, with a significant
percent increment in FVC level (1.6%) for girls but not for boys. The
diagnosis of asthma with or without wheeze in the past year was associated
with a greater deficit in level of lung function than the reporting of
wheeze symptoms in a child without the diagnosis of asthma. The prevalence
of asthma and wheeze was higher among blacks, but no race differences were
found in the effects of asthma or wheeze on level of FEV1 and FEF25-75.
Compared with white adolescent female ever asthmatics with no medication
use, FEV1 level was 5.8% lower for those with routine medication use and
7.8% lower for those with routine and additional medication use. Although
white girls with wheeze but no diagnosis of asthma had slightly slower
growth of FEV1 (0.3% per year) than did white girls without asthma or
wheeze, children with asthma did not have slower annual growth in percent
terms. In absolute terms, growth of FEV1 was 14.7 ml/yr and FEF25-75 was 47
ml/s/yr slower for asthmatic white boys with wheeze than for those without
asthma; for girls with asthma and wheeze growth of FEF25-75 was 29 ml/s/yr
slower. We conclude that in absolute terms, but not in percent terms, the
pulmonary function deficits associated with asthma and wheeze increase
throughout childhood. In the preadolescent and adolescent years, the
mechanical properties of the lungs and the inflammatory process in
asthmatics may differ by gender, leading to gender differences in their
pulmonary function. We also conclude that lung function may not return to
normal, even when asthmatics become asymptomatic.
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Copyright © 1994 American Thoracic Society
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