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Respiratory Symptoms From Inhaled Substances

Respiratory Symptoms From Inhaled Substances

Allergens

An allergen is a substance which is capable of initiating an allergic reaction. The most important inhaled allergens are tiny invisible pollen grains, mold spores, house dust and animal danders.

Allergy-causing pollens come from plant flowers which at certain times of the year release large quantities of light buoyant pollen which can be carried for miles by the wind. These flowers are inconspicuous and often don’t really look like blossoms. They include trees which pollinate in spring, grasses in summer, and weeds in the fall. (See OAAC educational material handout Pollen Seasons) Ornamental flowers are generally not very important in allergy. They have large sticky pollen grains that are carried to other flowers by insects. They are not sufficiently abundant in the air to cause symptoms unless an allergic person is very close to them. However, some ornamental flowers are related to weeds. This is why some ragweed-allergic patients have symptoms when they are close to chrysanthemums, zinnias, asters, daisies, etc.

There are many types of molds in our environment. They have varying preferences for the types of places and conditions under which they grow into colonies. Some prefer to colonize indoors, some outdoors. The spores released by colonies are carried through the air to new places suitable for new colony formation. These spores are smaller than pollen grains but like pollens can cause allergic symptoms when they are inhaled.

The important constituents of house dust are the products of microscopic organisms found in most homes. House dust mites and molds thrive in warm moist conditions.

Like humans, fur-bearing animals continually grow new layers of skin. The indoor pet’s “dander” (tiny flakes of the outer layer of skin) falls off, disintegrates, and causes symptoms when inhaled. During early stages of allergy to a pet, patients are often unaware that the animal is contributing to their symptoms.

If a person is allergic to a pet, he/she should strictly avoid the animal. Outdoor pets are not of major concern. Pets that are confined to a limited part of the house (such as a tiled or wood-floored utility room and kitchen) are better then pets that contaminate the entire house. At the very least, pets should be kept out of the allergic person’s bedroom at all times. (See OAAC educational material handout Environmental Controls for Indoor Allergens.)

Irritants

An irritant is a substance which may trigger certain symptoms strictly because of its irritating effects. The symptoms mimic allergy, but in fact they are not really the result of an allergic reaction. Some individuals are extremely sensitive to these inhales substances (which incidentally bother the average person very little). The basis for this extreme membrane sensitivity is not well understood, but it is not allergy.

The most common offenders are smoke, cold air, wind, temperature changes, and weather fronts. Other provoking factors which bother some people in varying degrees include sharp pungent odors (paint, turpentine, aerosol sprays, perfumes, cleansers, cosmetics, chemical odors, exhaust smoke, insecticides, detergents and new fabric odors).

Respiratory infection is included in this category as is external wheezing in asthmatics.

Some substances are not only allergens or irritants but can be both. Examples include house dust, feed and grain dusts, and live Christmas trees. In any given patient allergens, irritants or a combination of both may be of major importance in the production of either asthma or nasal symptoms.

Occasionally patients who are sensitive to both irritants and allergens will have useful reduction in nasal and chest symptoms caused by irritants when their allergies are successfully treated. More commonly their susceptibility to irritants remains a separate problem and the treatment is by appropriate medication and avoidance. Irritant induced symptoms are more difficult to treat than those from allergens.

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AAAAI News: Sinusitis’s Impact on Asthma, Shot Brings 4-Season Relief

Chronic Sinusitis’s Impact on Asthma

Asthmatics can add chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) as a related condition, and one that has a significant health impact, according to new research.

In the study, patients with asthma who also had a chronic bronchial condition were the most likely to have CRS – and to feel the effects of this disease combination. The new findings will be presented at the 2022 annual meeting of the AAAAI (American Academy of Allergy Asthma & Immunology) in Phoenix in late February.

To conduct the study, researchers from Northwestern and Johns Hopkins universities analyzed medical records from 1988 to 2021 on those with asthma, who had CRS and/or bronchiectasis. In the latter chronic condition, the airway walls become thick and damaged. The patient experiences mucus buildup, coughing, and lung infections.

The sinus condition CRS lasts for more than 12 weeks, even with medication, and includes symptoms such as nasal congestion, facial pressure and thick nasal discharge.  

The team studied records spanning more than three decades to capture as many patients as possible, and to follow patients with asthma who did not initially have bronchiectasis, says study author Dr. Margaret Kim.

To measure the impact of CRS on patients with asthma and bronchiectasis, the researchers examined the use of medication, such as antibiotics and oral corticosteroids, along with the need for urgent health care. Of the 5,038 patients identified with asthma, 19 percent had bronchiectasis, 39 percent had CRS, and 10 percent had both conditions.

The study found that 51 percent of asthmatics who had bronchiectasis were more likely to have CRS than patients without it (36 percent).

Need for Medical Attention

The findings point to greater use of health-care resources among that 51 percent of asthma patients. The use of medications and the rate of hospital admissions and emergency room visits were all higher. The researchers conclude that CRS is an important to be aware of, especially in asthma patients with bronchiectasis.

The study is important as more patients are being diagnosed with bronchiectasis, which is associated with high health-care costs and requirements, said Kim, a clinical fellow in allergy and immunology at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine.

“This knowledge helps identify patients who need more medical attention,” she said.

To help the identification process, providers can routinely ask about symptoms of CRS in patients who have asthma and bronchiectasis, and patients with CRS. Kim says patients with CRS should also be screened for bronchiectasis if they have symptoms that could suggest the condition, such as a cough with phlegm and difficulty controlling asthma.

Asthma Relief for All Seasons

Patients taking the biologic drug tezepelumab experienced fewer asthma exacerbations during all seasons throughout the year than those taking the placebo as part of a Phase 3 clinical trial, according to results to be presented at the 2022 AAAAI meeting.

Researchers focused on asthma exacerbations based on each season when they analyzed the results of the study called Navigator. That trial divided more than 1,000 teen and adult patients with poorly controlled asthma and frequent exacerbations into two groups. Participants received by injection either tezepelumab or placebo every four weeks for a year (but did not know which, as the trial was “blinded”). The participants also remained on their standard asthma regimens of inhaled corticosteroid inhalers, plus at least one additional controller medication. 

Tezepelumab reduced the annualized asthma exacerbation rate in the 528 patients taking the drug by 63 percent in winter, 46 percent in spring, 62 percent in summer, and 54 percent in fall, according to the study. Compared to those taking the placebo, patients taking tezepelumab had fewer exacerbations in winter (81.7 percent vs. 66.6 percent), spring (84.3 percent vs 76.3 percent), summer (86.8 percent vs 73.1 percent) and fall (79.4 percent vs. 66.6 percent), the study found.

Tezepelumab is a monoclonal antibody designed to work at an early stage of immune system response in the airways, blocking TSLP (thymic stromal lymphopoietin). TSLP is a type of cytokine, or signaling molecule, that triggers immune defenses. In response to a trigger, TSLP cytokines set off a cascade of airway inflammation that leads to asthma symptoms.

In December 2021, the FDA approved Tezspire (tezepelumab-ekko) injection as an add-on maintenance treatment to improve severe asthma symptoms when used with a patient’s current asthma medicine.

To read the entire article online, visit https://www.allergicliving.com/2022/02/03/aaaai-news-sinusitiss-impact-on-asthma-shot-brings-4-season-relief/

The post AAAAI News: Sinusitis’s Impact on Asthma, Shot Brings 4-Season Relief appeared first on Oklahoma Allergy and Asthma Clinic.

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