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Asthma counterattack: symptoms decline when families fight allergens at home.


Debris from cockroaches cockroaches

insects which may carry Salmonella spp. in their gut and play a part in the spread of the disease.
 and dust mites, fungus spores, pet dander dander /dan·der/ (dan´der) small scales from the hair or feathers of animals, which may be a cause of allergy in sensitive persons.

dan·der
n.
, noxious noxious adj. harmful to health, often referring to nuisances.  chemicals.... These are a few of the things that can make the typical home a dangerous place for people with asthma. Molecules from these agents can trigger unnecessary immune responses in a susceptible person, producing breathlessness, 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 coughing. Some people outgrow outgrow verb To change the relationship with a condition or structure by dint of ↑ age or size; while children outgrow clothing, and certain behaviors, they rarely outgrow diseases–eg, asthma  asthma after childhood, some first develop it in adulthood, and others must cope with it all their lives. Over time, inflammation can reshape a person's airways and leave the lungs permanently impaired.

The world is in the clutches of a poorly understood epidemic. Globally, rates of asthma have been rising for years. In the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , the condition's prevalence has more than doubled since 1980, and asthma now affects up to 15 million people, including 6 million children.

The annual number of deaths from complications of asthma, which had been in decline through most of the 1960s and 1970s, climbed back up though the 1980s and reached a new high in the mid-1990s. Since then, the death toll has continued to rise, despite medical advances.

Scientists don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 why asthma's prevalence is increasing, although some evidence suggests that the condition is associated with exposure early in life to certain synthetic chemicals that have become widespread in recent decades (SN: 7/24/04,p. 52). Rather than directly triggering inflammation, these chemicals may predispose pre·dis·pose
v.
To make susceptible, as to a disease.
 a person's immune system immune system

Cells, cell products, organs, and structures of the body involved in the detection and destruction of foreign invaders, such as bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells. Immunity is based on the system's ability to launch a defense against such invaders.
 to overreact o·ver·re·act
v.
To react with unnecessary or inappropriate force, emotional display, or violence.
 to other commonly inhaled in·hale  
v. in·haled, in·hal·ing, in·hales

v.tr.
1. To draw (air or smoke, for example) into the lungs by breathing; inspire.

2.
 particles.

Researchers have devised therapies to suppress airway inflammation. The ubiquitous steroid-dispensing inhaler inhaler /in·hal·er/ (in-hal´er)
1. an apparatus for administering vapor or volatilized medications by inhalation.

2. ventilator (2).


in·hal·er
n.
 "has been a fantastic boost in the treatment of asthma" says clinical allergist al·ler·gist
n.
A physician specializing in the diagnosis and treatment of allergies.


allergist Immunology A physician, who is often trained in both internal medicine and clinical immunology and who manages Pts with
 and asthma specialist Albert Sheffer of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts.  in Boston. Other medications can open airways during severe attacks.

However, even with medication, asthma disrupts daily activities and may require emergency medical and hospitalizations.

People with asthma are generally advised not only to use medical tools but also to avoid environmental triggers--which vary from person to person--to reduce the number of attacks.

Until recently, studies of such environmental measures had shown little effectiveness. Now, a team of scientists reports a study indicating that cleansing the home of the substances that trigger asthma can reduce the number of attacks experienced by susceptible people. In this study, families received intensive, tailored support for reducing exposure to those substances by children with asthma.

The experimental intervention was expensive, so it remains uncertain how those findings might produce large-scale benefits. Nevertheless, many asthma specialists are pleased to see evidence that the interventions can have a clear effect.

PERSONALIZED PREVENTION "There's not a single cause of asthma," says epidemiologist Herman Mitchell of Rho, a Chapel Hill, N.C.-based research firm that conducts clinical trials of new therapies. "For some children, it's cockroaches; for some, it's dust mites." Other common household sources of trigger substances, known as allergens, are cats, dogs, rodents, and mold. All these allergens can be found in dust that accumulates on bedding, rugs, and other such surfaces.

Most asthmatics are sensitive to multiple allergens, Mitchell notes. Environmental interventions for asthma should be as varied as the condition's causes, he argues. Physicians must test each patient to determine which allergens his or her body reacts to. Such testing has been common for decades, but doctors' recommendations about steps that patients can take haven't necessarily been tailored to test results. For years, Mitchell says, "asthma interventions were canned" Oftentimes, they consisted of little more than instructing parents to get rid of pets and household-dust magnets, such as shag shag

see cormorant.
 carpeting, and to keep their kids away from cigarette smoke.

Mitchell and his medical colleagues at Rho and at collaborating research institutions decided to get more specific. The study enrolled 937 children aged 5 to 11 years, with moderate-to-severe asthma. The children lived in poor neighborhoods of seven U.S. cities and most were black or Hispanic.

The investigators used skin-prick tests to establish which of 11 likely substances caused allergic reactions in each child. In this common test, a doctor, nurse, or technician applies various allergens to tiny scratches on a person's skin. An inflamed wheal wheal (hwel) a localized area of edema on the body surface, often attended with severe itching and usually evanescent; it is the typical lesion of urticaria.

wheal
n.
 at any site indicates sensitivity. The researchers also analyzed dust from each child's home to see which allergens could be detected.

Half the families participating in the study didn't receive a tailored program of interventions. For the other half, the team introduced up to six specific interventions to address particle types found to he both problematic and present in their homes.

Interventions included hiring a pest-control service for families with children sensitive to and exposed to cockroach cockroach or roach, name applied to approximately 3,500 species of flat-bodied, oval insects forming the order Blattodea. Cockroaches have long antennae, long legs adapted to running, and a flat extension of the upper body wall that conceals the  allergens, providing air purifiers fitted with high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA HEPA  
abbr.
1. high-efficiency particulate air

2. high-efficiency particulate arresting
) filters to homes where mold, cat or dog allergens, or cigarette use created problems, and supplying vacuum cleaners with HEPA filters to combat dust.

The researchers distributed rightly woven coverings that prevent dust mite allergens from escaping a pillow, mattress, or box spring. They also instructed families to use mild bleach to eliminate mold and to remove a dog or cat that caused an allergic reaction in the child. On average, the team applied four measures per family in this group. "It's a focused, tailored, personalized intervention," says Mitchell.

To track asthma symptoms in both groups, researchers interviewed each child's parents by phone every 2 months. Every 6 months or so, a different team of scientists visited each home to check for the presence of allergens and, in the intervention group, to discuss the changes that families had made.

During the first year of the study, children whose families had received the tailored environmental counseling had asthma symptoms on an average of 6.8 days per month, while children without the benefit of a tailored approach had 8.4 days of symptoms.

During a second year of follow-up, the intervention and nonintervention non·in·ter·ven·tion  
n.
Failure or refusal to intervene, especially in the affairs of another nation.



non
 groups experienced symptoms on 2.6 and 3.2 days per 2-week period, respectively. Mitchell attributes both groups' second-year improvement to the greater attention that families paid--after months of being contacted every 2 weeks by researchers--to helping children avoid allergens.

"This is the first time we have evidence [that] documents the validity of environmental control," says Harvard's Sheffer. He headed the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program in the early 1990s, when it began advocating tailored environmental measures for managing asthma. Until now, says Sheffer, such recommendations relied more on logic than on data.

"We had been promoting environmental control because it seemed obvious that reducing exposure to allergens should reduce symptoms," he says.

SIGH OF RELIEF Despite the logic of environmental control, reports last year by two research groups east doubt on the approach. Those studies both appeared in the July 17, 2003 New England Journal of Medicine The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. .

"Both groups are well-established [teams of] excellent investigators, so those negative results were very disappointing," says Sheffer.

In one of the studies, Ashley Woodcock Ashley James Woodcock (born February 27, 1947, Adelaide, South Australia) is a former Australian cricketer who played in one Test and one ODI in 1974.  of Wythenshawe Hospital in Manchester, England, and his colleagues gave new covers for mattresses, pillows, and quilts to 1,122 adults with asthma. Half the volunteers received covers designed to create a barrier to dust mite allergens, and half got standard covers of more permeable permeable /per·me·a·ble/ (per´me-ah-b'l) not impassable; pervious; permitting passage of a substance.

per·me·a·ble
adj.
That can be permeated or penetrated, especially by liquids or gases.
 polyester and cotton.

During the subsequent year, the two volunteer groups showed no difference in the severity of their symptoms, their use of asthma medications, or their breathing, as measured by a device temporarily fitted over the mouth. The same was true when the researchers analyzed data only from the members of the two groups with known sensitivity to a dust mite allergen allergen /al·ler·gen/ (al´er-jen) an antigenic substance capable of producing immediate hypersensitivity (allergy).allergen´ic

pollen allergen
.

Woodcock woodcock: see snipe.
woodcock

Any of five species (family Scolopacidae) of plump, sharp-billed migratory birds of damp, dense woodlands in North America, Europe, and Asia.
 concludes, "Bed covers alone don't work in adults."

Allergist Roy Gerth van Wijk of the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and his colleagues attempted a similar intervention for allergen-associated inflammation inside the nose. That condition, called allergic rhinitis Allergic Rhinitis Definition

Allergic rhinitis, more commonly referred to as hay fever, is an inflammation of the nasal passages caused by allergic reaction to airborne substances.
, often appears with asthma and is considered by some researchers to be part of the same syndrome.

The researchers distributed covers for mattress, pillows, and blankets--half of which were designed to be allergen impermeable-to 279 people with allergic rhinitis. The researchers found that the special bedding covers reduced the abundance of dust mite allergens but observed no noticeable symptom relief among the volunteers using them, compared with the experience of volunteers using standard bedding.

Accounting for the different results from Mitchell's and his own group's interventions, Gerth van Wijk suggests that the effect of environmental control may be noticeable only in children or that the combination of measures employed in the more recent study may be superior to the single method used in his own study.

Woodcock is skeptical that an approach with as many components as the Mitchell study had can prove practical on a broad scale. Because many of the homes in the study received multiple interventions, there aren't enough data to determine the individual effect of each measure, Mitchell says.

"These are expensive interventions," Woodcock says. "You wouldn't give [a patient] four drugs and say, 'I'm not sure which one works, but take all four."

Mitchell agrees that the equipment and services involved in environmental interventions are fairly expensive. However, he says that environmental interventions are less expensive than drugs when considered in terms of cost per day of asthma symptoms eliminated. He and his colleagues calculate that the labor and equipment they used in interventions in their study amounted to less than $1,000 per child per year.

One major expense is in sending a health care provider to collect the dust that's needed to determine which allergens are present in a home. So, Mitchell and his colleagues at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) is one of 27 Institutes and Centers of the National Institutes of Health (NIH),which is a component of the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The Director of the NIEHS is Dr. David A. Schwartz.  in Research Triangle Park Research Triangle Park, research, business, medical, and educational complex situated in central North Carolina. It has an area of 6,900 acres (2,795 hectares) and is 8 × 2 mi (13 × 3 km) in size. Named for the triangle formed by Duke Univ. , N.C., have recently developed a dust-collection kit that a family could mall to a laboratory, which would report its results to the child's doctor.

Mitchell and other researchers recognize the challenge of bringing research findings to bear on asthma interventions in millions of homes. Allergists say that many families won't get rid of a pet that's contributing to a child's asthma. And adults told to quit smoking are notorious backsliders.

Anticipating such hurdles, Mitchell and his colleagues cautioned adults in their study to keep pets out of the bedrooms of children with asthma and not to smoke around these kids. That may partially explain the reductions the researchers witnessed in symptoms, even though most families didn't get rid of their pets or prohibit smoking in the home, Mitchell says.

In a recent survey of parents who were aware of at least one household trigger for their child's asthma, for example, only 35 purchased a new vacuum cleaner, while 70 percent bought the recommended air filter. But of 112 families in which a parent's cigarette use appeared to be a factor in a child's asthma, only 7 took any action to reduce the child's exposure to smoke, Michael Cabana and his colleagues at the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries.  in Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, city (1990 pop. 109,592), seat of Washtenaw co., S Mich., on the Huron River; inc. 1851. It is a research and educational center, with a large number of government and industrial research and development firms, many in high-technology fields such as  reported in the August Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology is a scientific journal in the field of allergy and immunology, with an emphasis on clinical relevance. It's the official journal of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. .

To increase the probability that families will take steps against asthma, doctors need to determine the most critical measures and focus on promoting only those, says Woodcock.

Gerth van Wijk agrees that narrowing the recommended measures to a critical few could help people carry out doctors' instructions. Mitchell and his colleagues probably overcame that hurdle, he says, because they had an extraordinary amount of contact with the families in their study.

"Education is one of the cornerstones of their intervention," Gerth van Wijk says. But most doctors aren't paid for taking extra time during office visits to fully explain the importance of reducing exposure to allergens and the methods of doing so.

The odds of a significant payoff may be best when pediatricians provide patient education, says Woodcock, because steps taken early in life to reduce allergen exposure might prevent the lasting lung damage that accumulates in chronic asthma.
Home remedies

Household cleanup cuts down on some common allergens

  SOURCE OF        PERCENTAGE OF          INTERVENTION
ALLERGEN(S) *    CHILDREN SENSITIVE    SUCCESS? ([dagger])

Cockroach                69                    YES
Dust mite                63                    YES
Mold                     50                    NO
Cat                      44                    YES
Rodents                  33                    NO
Dog                      22                    NO

* Some sources produce multiple allergens.

([dagger]) Did intervention, compared with no intervention,
significantly reduce allergens?
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Harder, Ben
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 27, 2004
Words:2003
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