Obesity can influence children’s and adolescents’ airway hyperresponsiveness differently

Obesity can influence children’s and adolescents’ airway hyperresponsiveness differently

Authors

  • Bruno Sposato Unit of Pneumology, Azienda Ospedaliera, “Misericordia” Hospital, Grosseto
  • Marco Scalese Institute of Clinical Physiology, National Research Council (CNR), Pisa
  • Maria Giovanna Migliorini Unit of Pneumology, Azienda Ospedaliera, “Misericordia” Hospital, Grosseto
  • Maria Piera Riccardi Unit of Infectivology “Misericordia” Hospital, Grosseto
  • Massimo Tosti Balducci Unit of Nuclear Medicine “Misericordia” Hospital, Grosseto
  • Luigi Petruzzelli Unit of Nuclear Medicine “Misericordia” Hospital, Grosseto
  • Raffaele Scala Unit of Pneumology and UTIP, “S.Donato” Hospital, Arezzo

Keywords:

Airway hyperresponsiveness, Asthma, Body mass index, Children and adolescents, Methacholine test, Obesity

Abstract

Background: Literature is still arguing about a possible relationship between airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) and body mass index (BMI). This study aimed at evaluating the influence of BMI on AHR and pulmonary function in children and adolescents that performed a methacholine test for suggestive asthma symptoms. Methods: 799 consecutive children/adolescents (535 M; mean age: 15 ± 3 yrs; median FEV1% predicted: 101.94% [93.46-111.95] and FEV1/FVC predicted: 91.07 [86.17-95.38]), were considered and divided into underweight, normal, overweight and obese. Different AHR levels were considered as moderate/severe (PD20 ≤ 400 μg) and borderline (PD20 > 400 μg). Results: 536 children/adolescents resulted hyperreactive with a median PD20 of 366 μg [IQR:168–1010.5]; 317 patients were affected by moderate/severe AHR, whereas 219 showed borderline hyperresponsiveness. Obese subjects aged > 13 years showed a lower (p = 0.026) median PD20 (187μg [IQR:110–519]) compared to overweight (377 μg [IQR:204–774]) and normal-weight individuals’ values (370.5 μg [IQR:189–877]). On the contrary, median PD20 observed in obese children aged ≤ 13 years (761 μg [IQR:731–1212]) was higher (p = 0.052) compared to normal-weight children’s PD20 (193 μg [IQR:81–542]) and to obese adolescents’ values (aged > 13 years) (p = 0.019). Obesity was a significant AHR risk factor (OR:2.853[1.037-7.855]; p = 0.042) in moderate/severe AHR adolescents. Females showed a higher AHR risk (OR:1.696[1.046-2.751] p = 0.032) compared to males. A significant relationship was found between BMI and functional parameters (FEV1, FVC, FEV1/FVC) only in hyperreactive females. Conclusions: Obesity seems to influence AHR negatively in female but not in male adolescents and children. In fact, AHR is higher in obese teenagers, in particular in those with moderate/severe hyperresponsiveness, and may be mediated by obesity-associated changes in baseline lung function.

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Published

12-09-2013

Issue

Section

Original Research Articles

How to Cite

1.
Sposato B, Scalese M, Migliorini MG, Riccardi MP, Tosti Balducci M, Petruzzelli L, et al. Obesity can influence children’s and adolescents’ airway hyperresponsiveness differently. Multidiscip Respir Med [Internet]. 2013 Sep. 12 [cited 2024 Jul. 4];8(9). Available from: https://mrmjournal.org/index.php/mrm/article/view/572