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Antacids for asthma sufferers?


People acutely ill with asthma have abnormally high, but reversible, acidity acidity /acid·i·ty/ (-i-te) the quality of being acid; the power to unite with positively charged ions or with basic substances.

a·cid·i·ty
n.
The state, quality, or degree of being acid.
 in their lungs. This unexpected finding may lead to improved therapies for treating the disease and new ways to predict an attack, says study coauthor Benjamin Gaston of the University of Virginia Health System in Charlottesville.

He and his colleagues collected moisture from volunteers' breath and measured its acidity. The average pH value among 22 asthma patients who had recently experienced difficulty breathing was 5.2, the researchers report in the March AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE.

In contrast, lung moisture from people who aren't asthmatic had an average pH of 7.65, and that from people whose asthma symptoms were under control was pH 7.8. A pH below 7 is acidic, and a pH of 5.2 "is not compatible with normal lung function," says Jonathan S. Stamler of Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C.

Low pH values may serve as "an early warning sign of an impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 asthma attack," Gaston speculates, perhaps enabling people to take medications early, when they are most likely to be effective.

If confirmed in larger studies, the findings may have implications for treatment. Just as antacids--which neutralize neutralize

to render neutral.
 excess stomach acid--can prevent stomach pain, drugs that normalize normalize

to convert a set of data by, for example, converting them to logarithms or reciprocals so that their previous non-normal distribution is converted to a normal one.
 the pH of an asthmatic's lungs may reverse symptoms such as wheezing Wheezing Definition

Wheezing is a high-pitched whistling sound associated with labored breathing.
Description

Wheezing occurs when a child or adult tries to breathe deeply through air passages that are narrowed or filled with mucus as a
 and inflammation, Stamler says.
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Title Annotation:research links asthma and lung acidity
Author:D.C.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Apr 8, 2000
Words:226
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