Literature DB >> 20693244

Association between human rhinovirus C and severity of acute asthma in children.

J Bizzintino1, W-M Lee, I A Laing, F Vang, T Pappas, G Zhang, A C Martin, S-K Khoo, D W Cox, G C Geelhoed, P C McMinn, J Goldblatt, J E Gern, P N Le Souëf.   

Abstract

A new and potentially more pathogenic group of human rhinovirus (HRV), group C (HRVC), has recently been discovered. We hypothesised that HRVC would be present in children with acute asthma and cause more severe attacks than other viruses or HRV groups. Children with acute asthma (n = 128; age 2-16 yrs) were recruited on presentation to an emergency department. Asthma exacerbation severity was assessed, and respiratory viruses and HRV strains were identified in a nasal aspirate. The majority of the children studied had moderate-to-severe asthma (85.2%) and 98.9% were admitted to hospital. HRV was detected in 87.5% and other respiratory viruses in 14.8% of children, most of whom also had HRV. HRVC was present in the majority of children with acute asthma (59.4%) and associated with more severe asthma. Children with HRVC (n = 76) had higher asthma severity scores than children whose HRV infection was HRVA or HRVB only (n = 34; p = 0.018), and all other children (n = 50; p = 0.016). Of the 19 children with a non-HRV virus, 13 had HRV co-infections, seven of these being HRVC. HRVC accounts for the majority of asthma attacks in children presenting to hospital and causes more severe attacks than previously known HRV groups and other viruses.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20693244      PMCID: PMC3024467          DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00092410

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Respir J        ISSN: 0903-1936            Impact factor:   16.671


  31 in total

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  172 in total

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Review 10.  The role of viral infections in exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma.

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