Welcome to PLIVAallergy centar





  Home




  About allergies


Respiratory allergies

Insect Allergies

Food allergies

Drugs allergies

Skin allergies

  Treatment options


  Professional access


Articles

News

Products

Presentations

Workshop

  Glossary


  Archive


  Contact us


  About PLIVA


  PLIVAhealth


  PLIVAmed.net



RELEASED: 21.11.2009.
back   send   print

Sad, stressful events may worsen asthma in children

When asthma and symptoms of depression coexist in children, asthma may become worse, study findings suggest.


Researchers studied the breathing patterns of 90 asthmatic 7- to 17-year-old boys and girls before and after they watched scenes from the movie ET: The Extraterrestrial.

Half of the kids had symptoms of depression, in addition to asthma, while the other half did not.

The children with both asthma and symptoms of depression were more likely to show greater airway resistance after watching troubling scenes from the movie, Dr. Bruce D. Miller, at State University of New York at Buffalo, and colleagues found.

Airway resistance, an indicator of worsening asthma, is akin to "blowing through a straw with a narrow opening," as opposed to a larger opening, Miller said.

The asthmatic kids with symptoms of depression consistently showed breathing patterns indicative of worsening asthma after watching distressing scenes in the movie.

Distressed breathing was most pronounced during scenes of family distress, loss, and death.

By contrast, Miller's team found that breathing patterns "considered typical and adaptive in response to emotional stress," among kids without symptoms of depression.

Miller cautions parents of children with asthma to be aware of the possibility that stressful or emotionally troubling events may lead to worsening asthma episodes.


Science Daily

back   send   print




Copyright © 1998-2010 PLIVA Hrvatska d.o.o. All rights reserved
Contact us | Sitemap | Important legal information.