Literature DB >> 28949783

The effect of bronchodilation and spirometry on fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO50), bronchial NO flux (JawNO) and alveolar NO concentration (CANO) in children and young adults.

Theodoros Karampitsakos1, Adonis Protopapas1, Maria Gianoloudi1, Vassileios P Papadopoulos2, Demosthenes Bouros3, Athanasios Chatzimichael1, Emmanouil Paraskakis1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO), bronchial nitric oxide (JawNO) and alveoar nitric oxide (CANO) are biomarkers of eosinophilic inflammation, usually measured simultaneously with spirometry and bronchodilation. Our aim was to investigate the effect of bronchodilation and spirometry on FeNO, CANO and JawNO in children and young adults with well-controlled asthma and in healthy volunteers.
METHODS: FeNO was measured in 95 subjects (62 controls, 33 asthmatics). CANO and JawNO were assessed in 41 of the subjects (35 healthy, 6 asthmatics.) Measurements were performed before spirometry (1), right after spirometry (2), 20 min after the first spirometry and bronchodilation (3), right after the post-bronchodilation spirometry (4) and 30 min after the last spirometry (5).
RESULTS: The presence of well-controlled asthma was not associated with different pattern of reaction after spirometry and bronchodilation. A statistically significant difference was observed only between FeNO4 and FeNO5, as well as between CANO1 and CANO3 (19.14 ± 1.68 vs 20.62 ± 1.85 ppb, p = 0.001 and 4.42 ± 0.40 vs 3.09±0.32 ppb, p = 0.001, respectively).
CONCLUSIONS: Spirometry and bronchodilation have an insignificant effect on FeNO and JawNO. Even if a slight change occurs in FeNO and JawNO, this does not modify clinician's decision and therapeutic strategy. CANO values (CANO1) are significantly decreased 20 min after spirometry and bronchodilation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Asthma; bronchodilation; fractional exhaled nitric oxide; spirometry

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28949783     DOI: 10.1080/02770903.2017.1373807

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Asthma        ISSN: 0277-0903            Impact factor:   2.515


  1 in total

1.  Elevated Levels of Alveolar Nitric Oxide May Indicate Presence of Small Airway Inflammation in Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

Authors:  Adonis A Protopapas; Stergios Vradelis; Theodoros Karampitsakos; Paschalis Steiropoulos; Athanasios Chatzimichael; Emmanouil Paraskakis
Journal:  Lung       Date:  2019-07-17       Impact factor: 2.584

  1 in total

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