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Exhaled breath condensate pH and childhood asthma: unselected birth cohort study.
Nicolaou N, Lowe L, Murray CS, Woodcock AA, Simpson A, Custovic A
Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2006;174( 3):254-259.
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Abstract
RATIONALE: Exhaled breath condensate pH (EBC-pH) may be useful noninvasive marker for evaluation of patients with asthma.OBJECTIVES: To investigate the relationship between EBC-pH and symptoms suggestive of childhood asthma in an epidemiologic setting and examine its relation to lung function, airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR), and airway inflammation.METHODS: Within the context of a prospective population-based birth cohort, EBC was collected from 630 children at age 8 yr using the RTube (pH measured after deaeration with argon).Lung function was measured by spirometry (FEV1; n = 521) and plethysmography (sRaw; n = 567), and AHR by methacholine challenge (n = 498).Airway inflammation was assessed using exhaled nitric oxide (eNO; n = 305).RESULTS: EBC-pH values ranged widely (4.40-8.29), and did not differ between 54 children with parentally reported asthma and 562 nonasthmatic subjects (median [interquartile range]: 7.75 [7.45-7.85] vs.7.77 [7.59-7.87]; p = 0.35).There was a trend for lower EBC-pH among current wheezers (n = 98; 7.72 [7.50-7.83]) compared with nonwheezers (n = 532; 7.77 [7.60-7.87]; p = 0.07).Wheeze frequency, severity, and use of antiasthma medication were not associated with EBC-pH.There was no consistent association between EBC-pH and lung function, airway reactivity, and airway inflammation (FEV1, sRaw, PD20 methacholine, or eNO).There was no significant difference in EBC-pH between current wheezers receiving asthma medication who had positive methacholine challenge compared with children without any of these features.CONCLUSIONS: In the epidemiologic setting, EBC-pH does not differ between children with and without parentally reported symptoms suggestive of asthma.We found no consistent association between EBC-pH and lung function, AHR, and airway inflammation in this sample from the general population.
Keyword(s)
Breath Tests; Child; Cohort Studies; Forced Expiratory Volume; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Prospective Studies; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; Respiratory Function Tests; Respiratory Sounds; complications: Asthma; complications: Inflammation; diagnosis: Bronchial Hyperreactivity