The Diagnosis of Asthma

In this issue of the Canadian Respiratory Journal, LindenSmith et al (pages 111 to 116) present data that strongly suggest that patients who do not have asthma frequently acquire this diagnosis. They recruited 90 adults who thought that they had asthma and, in fact, had symptoms of asthma, and found...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nick R Anthonisen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2004-01-01
Series:Canadian Respiratory Journal
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2004/914681
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850173332569194496
author Nick R Anthonisen
author_facet Nick R Anthonisen
author_sort Nick R Anthonisen
collection DOAJ
description In this issue of the Canadian Respiratory Journal, LindenSmith et al (pages 111 to 116) present data that strongly suggest that patients who do not have asthma frequently acquire this diagnosis. They recruited 90 adults who thought that they had asthma and, in fact, had symptoms of asthma, and found that over 40% of them did not have objective evidence of the disease; of these, 43% were taking inhaled corticosteroids. Objective evidence was defined as demonstrable reversible airways obstruction, meaning spirometric response to inhaled bronchodilators, diurnal peak flow variability and/or methacholine responsiveness. Of these, methacholine response was by far the most important; in fact, a confirmed diagnosis amounted to symptoms plus methacholine sensitivity. The authors discussed possible reasons for lack of methacholine responsiveness in people who really have asthma, but were unconvinced that these were important confounders in their study and cited other studies that have also found that asthma is overdiagnosed.
format Article
id doaj-art-cd44e004c7734778bc65238e4d5e1127
institution OA Journals
issn 1198-2241
language English
publishDate 2004-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Canadian Respiratory Journal
spelling doaj-art-cd44e004c7734778bc65238e4d5e11272025-08-20T02:19:52ZengWileyCanadian Respiratory Journal1198-22412004-01-0111210310410.1155/2004/914681The Diagnosis of AsthmaNick R AnthonisenIn this issue of the Canadian Respiratory Journal, LindenSmith et al (pages 111 to 116) present data that strongly suggest that patients who do not have asthma frequently acquire this diagnosis. They recruited 90 adults who thought that they had asthma and, in fact, had symptoms of asthma, and found that over 40% of them did not have objective evidence of the disease; of these, 43% were taking inhaled corticosteroids. Objective evidence was defined as demonstrable reversible airways obstruction, meaning spirometric response to inhaled bronchodilators, diurnal peak flow variability and/or methacholine responsiveness. Of these, methacholine response was by far the most important; in fact, a confirmed diagnosis amounted to symptoms plus methacholine sensitivity. The authors discussed possible reasons for lack of methacholine responsiveness in people who really have asthma, but were unconvinced that these were important confounders in their study and cited other studies that have also found that asthma is overdiagnosed.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2004/914681
spellingShingle Nick R Anthonisen
The Diagnosis of Asthma
Canadian Respiratory Journal
title The Diagnosis of Asthma
title_full The Diagnosis of Asthma
title_fullStr The Diagnosis of Asthma
title_full_unstemmed The Diagnosis of Asthma
title_short The Diagnosis of Asthma
title_sort diagnosis of asthma
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2004/914681
work_keys_str_mv AT nickranthonisen thediagnosisofasthma
AT nickranthonisen diagnosisofasthma