Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"asthma" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Early family socioeconomic status and asthma-related outcomes in school-aged children: Results from seven birth cohort studies Yang-Huang J; McGrath JJ; Gauvin L; Nikiéma B; Spencer NJ; Awad YA; Clifford S; Markham W; Mensah F; Andersson White P; Ludvigsson J; Faresjö T; Duijts L; van Grieken A; Raat H; 38849153
PERFORM
2 Perinatal, obstetric and parental risk factors for asthma in the offspring throughout childhood: a longitudinal cohort study Caparros-Gonzalez RA; Essau C; Gouin JP; Pemau A; Galvez-Merlin A; de la Torre-Luque A; 37326102
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Acceptability of Serious Games in Pediatric Asthma Education and Self-management: Pilot Study Silva-Lavigne N; Valderrama A; Pelaez S; Bransi M; Balli F; Gervais Y; Gaudy T; Tse SM; 35389354
CONCORDIA
4 Validation of a Portable Game Controller to Assess Peak Expiratory Flow Against Conventional Spirometry in Children: Cross-sectional Study. Chelabi K, Balli F, Bransi M, Gervais Y, Marthe C, Tse SM 33512326
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Perinatal, obstetric and parental risk factors for asthma in the offspring throughout childhood: a longitudinal cohort study
Authors:Caparros-Gonzalez RAEssau CGouin JPPemau AGalvez-Merlin Ade la Torre-Luque A
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37326102/
DOI:10.1515/jpm-2022-0543
Publication:Journal of perinatal medicine
Keywords:assisted reproductive technologyasthmadeliveryperinatal factorspregnancy
PMID:37326102 Category: Date Added:2023-06-16
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY

Description:

Objectives: Asthma is a common chronic and burdensome disease which typically begins in childhood. The aim of this study was to assess perinatal and obstetric factors which may increase the risk of developing asthma in the offspring.

Methods: Data from five consecutive waves (n=7,073 children, from birth to 15 years old) from a nationally-representative birth cohort of people born in the United Kingdom between 2000 and 2002, the Millennium Cohort Study (MCS), were used. The Kaplan-Meier survival curve was used to graphically display the risk of developing asthma from early childhood to adolescence. The Z-based Wald test was used to prove significant covariate loading.

Results: Cox regression analyzing the influence of covariates on asthma development risk showed a significant likelihood ratio test, ?2(18)=899.30, p<0.01. A parent with asthma (OR=2.02, p<0.01), a younger maternal age at delivery (OR=0.98, p<0.05), and the use of assisted reproductive technology (OR=1.43, p<0.05) were associated with an increased risk of developing asthma in the offspring.

Conclusions: Perinatal factors (a younger maternal age, assisted reproductive technology) and a parental factor (a parent with asthma) increased the risk for developing asthma in the offspring.





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