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. 1996 Feb;51(2):207–209. doi: 10.1136/thx.51.2.207

Exercise-induced asthma and cardiovascular fitness in asthmatic children.

B J Thio 1, A F Nagelkerke 1, A G Ketel 1, B L van Keeken 1, J E Dankert-Roelse 1
PMCID: PMC473047  PMID: 8711660

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The role of physical training in the management of children with exercise-induced asthma is controversial. A study was undertaken to determine whether a relationship could be found between the occurrence of exercise-induced asthma and the degree of cardiovascular fitness in asthmatic children. METHODS: Twenty eight children aged 6-13 with mild to moderate asthma and dyspnoea during or after physical exercise were tested. All patients had a basal forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) of > 80% predicted. Twelve patients were taking corticosteroid maintenance medication by inhalation and 16 were not. Two exercise tests were performed on a treadmill to assess peak oxygen consumption rate (VO2max) and the percentage decrease in FEV1 after exercise. RESULTS: There was no correlation between the VO2max and the percentage decrease in FEV1. Patients not taking steroids showed a greater fall in FEV1 than those receiving corticosteroid medication (mean fall in FEV1 28.7% versus 6.6%). Four of the 12 children treated with steroids and two of the 16 children not taking steroids had a level of cardiovascular fitness lower than the 5th percentile for healthy Dutch children. CONCLUSION: Normal cardiovascular fitness does not prevent exercise-induced asthma.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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