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Exhaled nitric oxide in school children: Searching for the lost variability

    1. [1] Universidad de Murcia

      Universidad de Murcia

      Murcia, España

    2. [2] Hospital Clinico Universitario de Valencia

      Hospital Clinico Universitario de Valencia

      Valencia, España

  • Localización: Allergologia et immunopathologia: International journal for clinical and investigate allergology and clinical immunology, ISSN-e 1578-1267, ISSN 0301-0546, Vol. 44, Nº. 3, 2016, págs. 206-213
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Objective The factors – including asthma and rhinoconjunctivitis – which influence FeNO values in a general population of school children have been studied in order to know to what extent the variability of those values can be explained.

      Methods FeNO was measured in a population of 240 school children aged 6–12 years by means of a Niox-Mino™ device in a standardised way. Parents filled in an ISAAC-validated questionnaire of symptoms and environmental factors. Diagnoses were checked against clinical records. Height and weight were measured. A multivariate regression analysis including all variables in the questionnaire was performed, which was followed by two Xi stepwise tests in order to build a predictive model which included the main variables influencing FeNO values.

      Results Among the 240 children, 10 suffered from asthma, 16 from rhinoconjunctivitis and 15 from both conditions. FeNO values (GM ± GSD) in children with rhinoconjunctivitis (19.61 ± 1.20 ppb), with asthma (18.62 ± 1.32 ppb), and with both conditions (17.62 ± 1.19 ppb) tended to be significantly higher than control children (11.42 ± 1.04 ppb), p = 0.0016, p = 0.08 and p = 0.01, respectively. The different predictive models were able to explain only 20–27% of FeNO variability.

      Conclusions The proportion of FeNO inter-individual variability which can be explained by individual (including suffering from asthma or rhinoconjunctivitis), family, and environmental factors is very low (20–27%). This could have implications on the usefulness of FeNO as a diagnostic tool in asthma.


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