2005
DOI: 10.1136/adc.2005.081927
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Respiratory function of very prematurely born infants at follow up: influence of sex

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Cited by 42 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Our findings of boys with airway obstruction compared with girls are consistent with prior reports (27,(34)(35)(36), and the finding of black infants with increased airway obstruction compared with white infants also supports previous studies (37)(38)(39). The responsiveness to bronchodilators in our study (29% of infants) is comparable to that reported by Goldstein and colleagues (40), who found response to albuterol in 20 to 25% of a small cohort of healthy infants and young children born at more than 36 weeks of age, and to those of Debley and colleagues, who reported a bronchodilator response in 24% of 76 infants with recurrent wheezing (41).…”
Section: Original Researchsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Our findings of boys with airway obstruction compared with girls are consistent with prior reports (27,(34)(35)(36), and the finding of black infants with increased airway obstruction compared with white infants also supports previous studies (37)(38)(39). The responsiveness to bronchodilators in our study (29% of infants) is comparable to that reported by Goldstein and colleagues (40), who found response to albuterol in 20 to 25% of a small cohort of healthy infants and young children born at more than 36 weeks of age, and to those of Debley and colleagues, who reported a bronchodilator response in 24% of 76 infants with recurrent wheezing (41).…”
Section: Original Researchsupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Male sex is considered an independent predictor for the development of BPD (Kraybill et al, 1989). The lung function in boys both in the neonatal period and at 1 year of age was noted to be worse when compared to girls (Stocks et al, 1997; Thomas et al, 2006). The reasons behind this are not known though better antioxidant defense mechanism in girls is thought to contribute to this advantage (Vento et al, 2009a; Hamon et al, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Male infants require more doses of surfactant, significantly longer mechanical support, and a greater proportion are oxygen dependent at 36 wk postmenstrual age (40). Findings such as these suggest that there may be sex differences in factors other than pulmonary surfactant that could contribute to the "male disadvantage."…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…IT IS NOW WIDELY RECOGNIZED THAT, following preterm birth, males have a greater risk of death and illness compared with females (14,39,40,52), although the difference in mortality between males and females has declined in recent years (6,13).…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%