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Urban Kids With Asthma Need More Frequent
Check-ups, Study Suggests
Hopkins Children's researchers studied 150 Baltimore
City asthmatic children 2 to 6 years of age and were "surprised" to
find that nearly half of those with the mildest asthma
at their first visit had worsening symptoms as early
as three months later. The changes were so serious
that they required either new drugs or new doses.
"We know asthma is an unstable disease, but we
underestimated just how unpredictably it could behave
over time, especially in inner-city kids," said
researcher Hemant Sharma, M.D., a pediatric allergist
at Hopkins Children's. "Doctors and parents need
to be more vigilant and schedule at least three-month
check-ups even if the child appears to be doing fine."
The findings also suggest that pediatricians should
shift their focus away from disease severity at diagnosis
to disease control.
"Asthma control appears to be a better barometer
of a child's risk for a flare-up than is initial assessment
of symptoms, a staple that many doctors use as their
yardstick for treatment and follow-up," said lead
investigator Gregory Diette, M.D., M.H.S., a lung specialist
at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
Asthma is the most common pediatric chronic illness,
affecting 6.2 million children in the United States.
Severe illness is most prevalent in inner-city children,
doctors say, because of pollution, poor access to regular
health care and disproportionate exposure to allergens
like mice and cockroaches as well as to dust, cigarette
smoke and automobile fumes.
In the study, researchers found that children with
poorly controlled disease were two to three times more
likely than those with good control to end up at the
doctor's office or in the emergency department with
bad asthma symptoms in the three months following diagnosis.
The Hopkins scientists defined four levels of asthma
control - mild intermittent, mild persistent, moderate
persistent and severe persistent - determined by the
frequency of coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath,
waking up at night, use of rescue medications to stop
an asthma attack and limitations on physical activity.
How often children needed medical attention for their
symptoms varied greatly from one level to the next,
researchers found, and each higher level of severity
doubled a child's risk of emergency medical care. |