Airway Differences May Explain Why
Asthma Can Be More Serious for Blacks
Differences
in airway inflammation may be one reason why black people
with asthma are less responsive to
treatment and more likely to die from the disease than white people, a new
study suggests.
Asthma is a chronic lung disease, and
airway inflammation is a major component of asthma. The inflammation
causes the airways to swell and become more sensitive, which eventually leads
to symptoms such as wheezing and shortness of breath, according to the U.S. National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
"Emerging
evidence suggests that differences in airway inflammation can affect a
patient's response to treatment, but whether the patterns of airway
inflammation vary across race has, until now, been very unclear," said
study corresponding author Dr. Sharmilee Nyenhuis. She's an allergy, asthma and immunology specialist
at University of Illinois at Chicago.
Blacks are
two to three times more likely than whites to be hospitalized or die from
asthma, and factors such as access to health care and living conditions don't
entirely explain that large difference, according to background information
with the study.
The researchers
analyzed samples of coughed-up fluids from 1,000 asthma patients nationwide.
The samples were tested for a type of white blood cell called eosinophils.
The study
found that black people were more likely than white people to have what is
called eosinophilic airway inflammation -- even if they took similar doses
of asthma medications such as corticosteroids.
"Our
findings of higher numbers of African-Americans with this type of airway
inflammatory pattern suggests a mechanism that may account for more severe and
difficult to control asthma in African-Americans," Nyenhuis said in a
university news release. This eosinophilic airway inflammation in blacks may be
associated with worsened asthma and a reduced response to corticosteroids, she
added.
The results
suggest that black people with eosinophilic airway inflammation may not benefit
from increasingly strong corticosteroid treatment. Instead, they may
need other types of treatment, Nyenhuis said.
17.01.2017
You
can not solve a problem with the same thinking that created it
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