Searching Medicine ™
The Right Place for Searching Medical Information

... for Patients and Physicians ...

Search medical information from millions of medical websites and thousands of medical journals!


Include: Video search :: Quick image search
My Search :: About :: Feedback :: Contact Us :: Home

Powered by © PubMed Reader - customized PubMed search

Published: . Jun 2010

Prazma CM, Kral KM, Gul N, Yancey SW, Stempel DA

Controller medications and their effects on asthma exacerbations temporally associated with upper respiratory infections.
(Respir Med)


BACKGROUND: Exacerbations are a major risk and a cause of asthma morbidity and healthcare utilization. Viral-induced upper respiratory tract infections are the most frequent trigger of asthma-related exacerbations. Studies have traditionally assessed exacerbations without documentation regarding exacerbation etiology. Therefore, it remains unknown whether asthma medications can alter exacerbation susceptibility based on a specific etiology.

OBJECTIVE: To examine whether treatment with inhaled corticosteroids plus long-acting beta(2)-agonists reduced the number of exacerbations associated with upper respiratory tract infections versus inhaled corticosteroids alone. METHODS: Two large datasets comparing treatment with fluticasone propionate and fluticasone propionate plus salmeterol were analyzed, including the number of clinically reported upper respiratory tract infections, asthma-related exacerbations, and the presence of an exacerbation and concurrent report of an upper respiratory tract infection.

RESULTS: Both treatment groups had similar incidences of upper respiratory tract infections. Of those reporting an upper respiratory tract infection, statistically significantly fewer reported an asthma-related exacerbation comparing fluticasone propionate plus salmeterol with fluticasone propionate (p=0.0057).

DISCUSSION: This retrospective analysis suggests that therapy with fluticasone propionate plus salmeterol provides protection against asthma exacerbations temporally associated with upper respiratory tract infections. This retrospective analysis supports the hypothesis that specific therapeutic approaches to mitigate virus-associated exacerbations may benefit asthma care. Well-controlled prospective studies are warranted.

-> Fulltext - The link to the fulltext is for registered users available. Register here for free!
Already registered? -> Login here

Read more articles from the authors:
1. Prazma CM
2. Kral KM
3. Gul N
4. Yancey SW
5. Stempel DA


Related articles

Read abstract in PubMed

Do search in PubMed

Copy citation:


Add to Yahoo    Add to Del.icio.us    Add to Google    Add to AOL    Add to Furl    Add to Connotea    Add to Citeulike    Add to Stumbleupon    Add to Dissect medicine    Add to 2collab   

Add Searching Medicine to your search engines :: Put Searching Medicine on your website :: Make Searching Medicine your homepage :: Add Searching Medicine to your favorites
© 2010 Searching Medicine