Measurement of exhaled nitric oxide is widely used in respiratory research and clinical practice, especially in patients with asthma. However, interpretation is often difficult, due to common interfering factors, and little is known about interactions between factors. We assessed the influences and interactions of factors such as smoking, respiratory tract infections and respiratory allergy concerning exhaled nitric oxide values, with the aim to derive a scheme for adjustment. We studied 897 subjects (514 females, 383 males; mean age+/-standard deviation 34.5+/-13.0 years) with and without respiratory allergy (allergic rhinitis and/or asthma), smoking and respiratory tract infection. Logarithmic nitric oxide levels were described by an additive model comprising respiratory allergy, smoking, respiratory tract infection, gender and height (p0.001 each), without significant interaction terms. Geometric mean was 17.5ppb in a healthy female non smoker of height 170cm, whereby respiratory allergy corresponded to a change by factor 1.50, smoking 0.63, infection 1.24, male gender 1.17, and each 10cm increase (decrease) in height to 1.11 (0.90). Factors were virtually identical when excluding asthma and using the category allergic rhinitis instead of respiratory allergy (n=863). Within each category formed by combinations of these different predictors, the range of residual variation was approximately constant. We conclude that the factors influencing exhaled nitric oxide, which we analyzed, act independently of each other. Thus, circumstances such as smoking and respiratory tract infection do not appear to affect the usefulness of exhaled nitric oxide, provided that appropriate factors for adjustment are applied.
After controlling for demographic and working time influences, findings suggest that junior doctors' perceived job autonomy is negatively associated with future depressive symptoms. Enhancing job control emerges as a promising strategy to lower the risk of depression during first years of professional practice.
The results of this study indicate that-if chosen voluntarily-working NSs has no immediate negative effects on cognitive and psychomotor performance when compared with working TSs. There was no indication of an increased risk of accidents after working NSs. The unequal distribution of the circadian types in the shift groups may indicate selection.
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