Respiratory medicine
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Respiratory medicine · Sep 2001
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialBudesonide but not nedocromil sodium reduces exhaled nitric oxide levels in asthmatic children.
Exhaled nitric oxide (ENO) has been proposed as a marker of airway inflammation in asthma and could be useful to evaluate the response to anti-inflammatory treatment. We investigated the effect of budesonide and nedocromil sodium on ENO levels and lung function in asthmatic children. Twenty stable steroid-naïve asthmatic children were randomized in a single blind, cross-over study to receive inhaled budesonide (group A) or nedocromil sodium (group B) for 6 weeks. ⋯ There were no treatment-order effect, no carry-over effect and in both groups the response pattern was the same: budesonide significantly lowered ENO levels from 41.0 ppb to 22.8 ppb in group A (mean, P<0.01) and from 22.6 ppb to 13.0 ppb in group B, (mean, P<0.05), while nedocromil did not reduce ENO values (from 24.4 ppb to 22.6 ppb in group B and from 22.8 ppb to 38.0 ppb in group A, mean, P = NS and P<0.01 respectively). After budesonide treatment ENO values of asthmatics were still significantly higher than in healthy children The baseline values of FEV1 and FEF(25-75) were normal in both groups and no significant changes were observed during the study. In conclusion, our study shows that budesonide, but not nedocromil sodium, significantly reduces ENO levels in stable asthmatic children even in absence of changes in the lung function.
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Respiratory medicine · Sep 2001
Comparative StudyScreening of obstructive sleep apnoea: heart rate spectral analysis of nocturnal pulse oximetric recording.
Using heart rate spectral analysis of nocturnal pulse oximetry, we prospectively evaluated the utility of this methodology in patients clinically suspected of having obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA). A hundred and ninety-seven outpatients referred with symptoms compatible with the diagnosis of OSA were studied. All participants had nocturnal pulse oximetry performed simultaneously with conventional polysomnography. ⋯ Furthermore, the positive and negative predictive values for diagnosis of OSA were 87 and 72% respectively. Apnoea hypopnea index (AHI) correlated significantly with S(TOT) (r=0.44; P<0.001), S(30-70) (r=0.59: P<0.001), S (r=0.58; P<0.001) and PA (r=0.58; P<0.001). According to our results, heart rate spectral analys s obtained by nocturnal pulse oximetry and identification of peak in the periodogram between period boundaries 30-70 sec could be useful as a diagnostic technique for OSA patients.