| Literature DB >> 31294006 |
Michelle Trivedi1,2, Eve Denton3,4.
Abstract
Asthma varies considerably across the life course. Childhood asthma is known for its overall high prevalence with a male predominance prior to puberty, common remission, and rare mortality. Adult asthma is known for its female predominance, uncommon remission, and unusual mortality. Both childhood and adult asthma have variable presentations, which are described herein. Childhood asthma severity is associated with duration of asthma symptoms, medication use, lung function, low socioeconomic status, racial/ethnic minorities, and a neutrophilic phenotype. Adult asthma severity is associated with increased IgE, elevated FeNO, eosinophilia, obesity, smoking, and low socioeconomic status. Adult onset disease is associated with more respiratory symptoms and asthma medication use despite higher prebronchodilator FEV1/FVC. There is less quiescent disease in adult onset asthma and it appears to be less stable than childhood-onset disease with more relapses and less remissions.Entities:
Keywords: adult; airway; asthma; childhood; pediatric
Year: 2019 PMID: 31294006 PMCID: PMC6603154 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2019.00256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Comparison of childhood and adult asthma.
| Variable Phenotypes | Yes | Yes |
| Symptoms | Age 0–6 years: Cough, wheezing, acute episodes of dyspnea and increased work of breathing | Shortness of breath, wheeze, chest tightness and cough. |
| Sex predominance | Males < 10 years | Females |
| Remission | Common | Rare |
| Factors associated with severity | Asthma duration, medication use, lung function, neutrophilic phenotype, low socioeconomic status, racial/ethnic minorities | IgE, FeNO, eosinophilia, obesity, smoking, low socioeconomic status |
| Mortality | Rare | Uncommon |
Asthma presentations across the lifecourse.
| Child | Asthma diagnosis | Physician's diagnosis of asthma at least once per lifetime or recurrent diagnoses of spastic, obstructive, or asthmatic bronchitis as reported by the parents at age 6 years |
| Frequent wheeze | Wheeze on a monthly basis for at least 1 year between age 1 and 6 years | |
| Unremitting wheeze | Having symptoms between wheezing episodes or having wheeze without a cold at least once between age 1 and 6 years | |
| Recurrent unremitting wheeze | Having | |
| Multi-Trigger wheeze | Having at least 2 common asthma triggers leading to wheeze between ages 3 and 6 years | |
| Episodic wheeze | Wheezing episodes associated only with viral upper respiratory infection between age 1 and 6 years. | |
| Severe asthma | Asthma which is poorly controlled based on frequent symptoms and significant morbidity | |
| Eosinophilic predominant asthma | Allergic asthma | |
| Neutrophilic predominant asthma | Non-allergic asthma | |
| Recurrent croup | Repeated episodes of croup | |
| Middle lobe syndrome | Repeated episodes of middle lobe infiltrate or atelectasis | |
| Recurrent pneumonia | Repeated episodes of lung infection | |
| Adult | Late onset eosinophilic asthma | Later onset, predominately female, and elevated sputum and serum eosinophils, associated with sinusitis |
| Obesity related asthma | Associated with increased levels of TNFa, IL-6, leptins, less eosinophils, FeNO, and corticosteroid responsiveness | |
| Neutrophilic asthma | Difficult to characterize, often severely obstructed with only partial reversibility and a high healthcare utilization | |
| Aspirin- associated asthma | Subset of late-onset eosinophilic asthma, associated with sinusitis, nasal polyps, and sensitivity to cyclooxygenase-1 inhibitors | |
| Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis | Lower airway allergic sensitization to |