Publication | Closed Access
A Prospective 12‐Year Follow‐up Study of Children with Wheezy Bronchitis
94
Citations
21
References
1984
Year
Eighty children with wheezy bronchitis were followed prospectively for 12 years. At the end of the follow-up period only 22 (28%) still had symptoms of asthma. Forty-three children (54%) had ceased to wheeze before the age of 3 years, four children between 3 and 7 years of age and 11 children between 7 and 11 years of age. Of the 22 children who still had asthma, all but one were much improved, although 70% of them noticed asthmatic symptoms during exercise. Heredity for asthma/wheezing, allergy, the occurrence of eczema, and onset of wheezing after 18 months of age were associated with an increased risk of persistent asthma. Allergy had developed in 59% of the children with persistent asthma and in 10% of those who had stopped wheezing. Serum IgE was above the mean +1 SD in 45% and above the mean +2 SD in 24% of the children at the end of the 12-year follow-up. A serum IgE above the mean +2 SD was found in 8 of 13 children with asthma combined with proven allergy, but only in 1 of 9 children with asthma without allergy. Surprisingly, 8 of 48 children who had stopped wheezing and had no clinical allergy had as high IgE levels as the children with asthma and allergy, which reduced the allergy predictive value of a high serum IgE to 36%. Some of these high IgE levels seemed to be a family trait.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1