1998
DOI: 10.1159/000029294
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Is Asthma in the Elderly Really Different?

Abstract: To examine the nature of asthma in the elderly, we compared older (group 1: 65 years or older, n = 50) with younger patients (group 2: <40 years, n = 99) and to determine the influence of long-standing disease, elderly asthmatics with early onset (group A: onset before 40, n = 22) were compared with patients developing symptoms later in their lives (group B: onset after 40, n = 22). Blood eosinophilia and IgE value >/=100 IU/l were more frequent in younger patients. Short symptom-free periods were more frequen… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…In symptomatic asthma in the elderly population, we have found that the most frequent subgroup is ‘severe’ (55% of patients), while in adults mild asthma was the most common (47%). In agreement with our results, Quadrelli and Roncoroni [24]observed a lesser proportion of patients with only mild symptoms in patients older than 65 compared with those younger than 40 years, suggesting that the duration of disease is a main factor influencing severity of asthma and development of irreversible airflow obstruction. The decrease observed in the FEV 1 among elderly asthmatics found in our study (59%) is in the range of figures reported in by other authors (between 49.5 and 67.5%) [10, 11].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…In symptomatic asthma in the elderly population, we have found that the most frequent subgroup is ‘severe’ (55% of patients), while in adults mild asthma was the most common (47%). In agreement with our results, Quadrelli and Roncoroni [24]observed a lesser proportion of patients with only mild symptoms in patients older than 65 compared with those younger than 40 years, suggesting that the duration of disease is a main factor influencing severity of asthma and development of irreversible airflow obstruction. The decrease observed in the FEV 1 among elderly asthmatics found in our study (59%) is in the range of figures reported in by other authors (between 49.5 and 67.5%) [10, 11].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Whether age predicts outcomes of asthma control has not yet been established. Previous epidemiologic surveys were not conclusive due to their retrospective design and imbalances in treatment [15,18,19,20]. The aim of our study is to evaluate whether age is associated with outcomes of asthma control in a prospective cohort of subjects receiving proper treatment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…'nın [19] bir çalışmasında 149 hasta ile yaptıkları çalışmada atopik hastalıkların her iki yaş grubunda (65 yaş altı 99, 65 yaş ve üstü 50 hasta) benzer oranda görül-düğünü; buna karşın eozinofili ve IgE düzeyinin yaşlı hastalarda daha düşük olduğunu tespit etmişlerdir. Bu durum ilerleyen yaşla birlikte alerjik yanıtın azalmasıyla ilişkili olabilir [20].…”
Section: Discussionunclassified