NEW YORK: Boys may be more likely than girls to have childhood asthma, but they are also more likely to grow out of it during adolescence, a new study shows.
Results of the study released on Friday help solve the mystery of age and sex differences in the natural history of childhood asthma, the lead researcher told Reuters Health.
“Persistence of airway responsiveness commonly referred to as twitchy airways is a major reason why asthma in girls may persist (or develop) past the onset of puberty,” Dr Kelan G. Tantisira, of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, said.
It’s known that the incidence of asthma around early school age is higher in boys than girls, whereas the incidence in adolescence and adulthood is higher in females than males, the researcher explained.
In addition to symptoms, twitchy or over-reactive airways are one useful marker for the development of asthma. Upon exposure to certain asthma triggers like pollen, dog or cat dander, cold air or histamine, an asthmatic’s airways are much more likely to constrict than those of a person without asthma.
Tantisira’s team studied the natural history of airway responsiveness in 1,041 children with mild to moderate asthma who were between 5 and 12 years old at the outset. They conducted standard “methacholine challenge” tests for twitchy airways annually over a period of nearly nine years.
Results showed that up until the age of about 11, airway “hyper-reactivity” decreased in both boys and girls and the average twitchiness was about the same in both sexes.—Reuters
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