Differential immune responses to acute lower respiratory illness in early life and subsequent development of persistent wheezing and asthma

Citation
Fd. Martinez et al., Differential immune responses to acute lower respiratory illness in early life and subsequent development of persistent wheezing and asthma, J ALLERG CL, 102(6), 1998, pp. 915-920
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Clinical Immunolgy & Infectious Disease",Immunology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
ISSN journal
00916749 → ACNP
Volume
102
Issue
6
Year of publication
1998
Part
1
Pages
915 - 920
Database
ISI
SICI code
0091-6749(199812)102:6<915:DIRTAL>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
Background: Recent epidemiologic evidence suggests that 2 wheezing syndrome s coexist in early life: transient wheezing, limited to early childhood, an d persistent wheezing, which starts in early childhood and persists beyond that age. Objective: Whether the nature of the immune response occurring during acute lower respiratory illnesses (LRIs) in infancy differs between these 2 grou ps of wheezers has yet to be determined. Methods: We compared total serum IgE levels and peripheral blood eosinophil counts obtained during the acute phase of the first LRI with those obtaine d during the convalescent phase or with well-baby samples in persistent (n = 49) and transient early wheezers (n = 88), as well as in children who had only nonwheezing LRIs (n = 43) during the first 3 years of life. Results: Total serum IgE Levels were significantly higher (P = .008) during the acute phase compared with the convalescent phase of the LRI in persist ent wheezers, a response not observed in transient early wheezers (P = .7). Peripheral blood eosinophil counts were significantly reduced during the a cute phase of the LRI (P = .009) in transient early wheezers, a response no t observed among persistent wheezers (P = .7). Acute responses in children who had nonwheezing LRIs only were similar to those seen in transient early wheezers. Conclusion: Alterations in acute immune response to viral infection may be detected at the time of the first wheezing episode in subjects who will go on to have persistent wheezing symptoms.