Literature DB >> 1592618

Clinical markers of asthma severity and risk: importance of subjective as well as objective factors.

S Janson-Bjerklie1, S Ferketich, P Benner, G Becker.   

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to explore patient perceptions of asthma severity and danger from asthma, correlate them with objective measures, and assess the impact of psychologic variables on the perception of severity. Recognition of patients at greatest risk for fatal attacks requires identifying those with severe asthma. In our study of 95 adults with asthma, we found that the subjective factors of perceived severity and perceived danger and the objective factors of medications, hospitalizations, history of intubation, and pulmonary function were important markers of asthma severity and risk. Our findings indicate that asthmatic adults make independent self-assessments that generally correlate with objective markers of increased risk of mortality and increased severity of the asthma. The perception of high severity was significantly correlated with depression, panic-fear, frequency of emergency department visits, and with an objective index of risk of death. The latter includes variables obtainable from history alone (number of medications to control symptoms, need for prednisone, prior intubation, and prior recent hospitalization) and is correlated with spirometric indexes of airflow obstruction, occurrence of nocturnal symptoms, and number of emergency department visits.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1592618

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart Lung        ISSN: 0147-9563            Impact factor:   2.210


  12 in total

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5.  Psychological factors and asthma quality of life: a population based study.

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Review 6.  Conceptual model of symptom-focused diabetes care for African Americans.

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7.  Depressive Symptoms in Inner-City Children With Asthma.

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8.  Depression in Asthma: Prevalence and Clinical Implications.

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9.  Depressive symptomatology, quality of life and disease control among individuals with well-characterized severe asthma.

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10.  Onset of depressive symptoms among adults with asthma: results from a longitudinal observational cohort.

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