Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3341254 Allergology International 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundCough variant asthma has recently been described, mainly as airway inflammation in relation to bronchial asthma, but the relationship between the two types of asthma remains unclear. Further studies of cough receptor sensitivity are necessary to fully characterize cough variant asthma.MethodsWe assessed the relevance of testing cough sensitivity using an Astograph® with continuous capsaicin inhalation, and compared the results with those obtained using intermittent inhalation. We showed the clinical applicability of testing cough sensitivity (0.156-80pM capsaicin; five or more coughs, 1 minute of continuous inhalation at each concentration) using this method. We compared cough sensitivity among patients with pure cough variant asthma who did not develop bronchial asthma after an observation period of at least 1 year, patients with bronchial asthma and healthy individuals.ResultsThe continuous cough sensitivity test using the Astograph® was reproducible and reliable. Cough sensitivity in patients with pure cough variant asthma was significantly higher than that in healthy individuals.ConclusionsThe cough sensitivity of patients with cough variant asthma is not necessarily identical to that of healthy individuals.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Immunology, Allergology and Rheumatology