Alveolar nitric oxide and its role in pediatric asthma control assessment

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Abstract

Background: Nitric oxide can be measured at multiple flow rates to determine proximal (maximum airway nitric oxide flux; Jaw NO ) and distal inflammation (alveolar nitric oxide concentration; CA NO ). The main aim was to study the association among symptoms, lung function, proximal (maximum airway nitric oxide flux) and distal (alveolar nitric oxide concentration) airway inflammation in asthmatic children treated and not treated with inhaled glucocorticoids.Methods: A cross-sectional study with prospective data collection was carried out in a consecutive sample of girls and boys aged between 6 and 16 years with a medical diagnosis of asthma. Maximum airway nitric oxide flux and alveolar nitric oxide concentration were calculated according to the two-compartment model. In asthmatic patients, the asthma control questionnaire (CAN) was completed and forced spirometry was performed. In controls, differences between the sexes in alveolar nitric oxide concentration and maximum airway nitric oxide flux and their correlation with height were studied. The correlation among the fraction of exhaled NO at 50 ml/s (FE NO50 ), CA NO , Jaw NO , forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV 1 ) and the CAN questionnaire was measured and the degree of agreement regarding asthma control assessment was studied using Cohen's kappa.Results: We studied 162 children; 49 healthy (group 1), 23 asthmatic participants without treatment (group 2) and 80 asthmatic patients treated with inhaled corticosteroids (group 3). CA NO (ppb) was 2.2 (0.1-4.5), 3 (0.2-9.2) and 2.45 (0.1-24), respectively. Jaw NO (pl/s) was 516 (98.3-1470), 2356.67 (120-6110) and 1426 (156-11805), respectively. There was a strong association (r = 0.97) between FE NO50 and Jaw NO and the degree of agreement was very good in group 2 and was good in group 3. There was no agreement or only slight agreement between the measures used to monitor asthma control (FEV 1 , CAN questionnaire, CA NO and Jaw NO ).Conclusions: The results for CA NO and Jaw NO in controls were similar to those found in other reports. There was no agreement or only slight agreement among the three measure instruments analyzed to assess asthma control. In our sample, no additional information was provided by CA NO and Jaw NO .

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Sardón, O., Corcuera, P., Aldasoro, A., Korta, J., Mintegui, J., Emparanza, J. I., & Pérez-Yarza, E. G. (2014). Alveolar nitric oxide and its role in pediatric asthma control assessment. BMC Pulmonary Medicine, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2466-14-126

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