| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6241393 | Respiratory Medicine | 2015 | 7 Pages | 
Abstract
												Asthmatics with PD report higher levels of subjective distress, despite exhibiting lower levels of physiological arousal, with no evidence of greater airway responsiveness. Results suggest that worse outcomes in PD patients may be more likely due to a catastrophization of bodily symptoms, rather than worse underlying asthma. Interventions designed to educate patients on how to distinguish and manage anxiety in the context of asthma are needed.
											Keywords
												Provocative ConcentrationPC20PSSSBPGLMDBPDSM-IV-TRACQMCTFEV1FVCMethacholine challenge testAsthmaPanic disorderAnxietyforced expiratory volume in one secondemergency department visitsbody mass indexBMIasthma severityHeart rateforced vital capacitydiastolic blood pressuresystolic blood pressureGLM, General Linear ModelAsthma Control Questionnaire
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											Authors
												Maxine Boudreau, Kim L. Lavoie, André Cartier, Barbara Trutshnigg, Alexandre Morizio, Catherine Lemière, Simon L. Bacon, 
											