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Lung function at 10 yr is not impaired by early childhood lower respiratory tract infections
Authors:Geir Hå  land,Karin Cecilie Lø  drup Carlsen,Petter Mowinckel,Monica Cheng Munthe-Kaas,Chandra Sekhar Devulapalli,Sveinung Berntsen, Kai-Hå  kon Carlsen
Affiliation:Division of Woman and Child, Department of Pediatrics, Ullevål University Hospital, Oslo, Norway;, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway;, Voksentoppen, Department of Pediatrics, Rikshospitalet University Hospital, Oslo, Norway;, Department of Sports Medicine, Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Oslo, Norway
Abstract:The causal relationship between lower respiratory tract infections (LRIs) in early life and reduced lung function later in childhood is unsettled. Therefore, we assessed whether LRIs the first 2 yr of life influenced lung function development from birth to school age. In the prospective Oslo birth cohort, ‘the Environment and Childhood Asthma (ECA) study’ lung function was measured at birth in 802 infants by tidal flow volume loops and in 664 infants by passive respiratory mechanics and half yearly questionnaires, including LRI questions, were completed until 2 yr of age. The present study includes 607 children with information about LRIs the first 2 yr of life and successfully forced expiratory flow (FEF) volume measurements at the 10‐yr follow‐up assessment. At 10 yr of age, FEF at 50% of forced vital capacity (FEF50) (mean 95% confidence interval) was reduced in children with at least one bronchiolitis (85.0, 80.6–89.5, p = 0.020) or bronchitis (86.2, 82.6–89.8, p = 0.030) or ≥3 LRIs (83.4, 78.1–88.8, p = 0.017) when compared with no LRIs (90.6, 88.8–92.5) by 2 yr of life. The effects were significant in girls only when stratifying for gender. Among girls with later bronchiolitis compliance of the respiratory system (3.64, 3.17–4.10 vs. 4.18, 3.98–4.37, p = 0.031) and the ratio of time to peak tidal expiratory flow to total expiratory time (tPTEF/tE) measured at birth was significantly reduced (0. 26, 0.23–0.29 vs. 0.32, 0.30–0.33, p = 0.005) when compared with children with no LRIs. Change in lung function from birth (by tPTEF/tE) to 10 yr of age was not significantly associated with LRIs the first 2 yr of life, and LRIs by 2 yr of life were not significantly associated with lung function at 10 yr of age in regression analyses including lung function at birth and other possible predictors of lung function at 10 yr. In our study, LRIs during the first 2 yr of life did not impair lung function development from birth until 10 yr of age.
Keywords:lung function development    lower respiratory tract infection    bronchiolitis    birth cohort    infant lung function
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