The Spectrum of Irritant-Induced Asthma

A retrospective investigation of 86 asthmatic subjects defined clinical features of irritant-induced asthma and assessed the contributory role of an allergic predisposition. Three categories of asthma were evaluated: (1) occupational asthma due to a sensitizer (11 subjects, 13%); (2) irritant-induce...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chest 1998-01, Vol.113 (1), p.42-49
Hauptverfasser: Brooks, Stuart M., Hammad, Yahia, Richards, Ira, Giovinco-Barbas, Joette, Jenkins, Kathleen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A retrospective investigation of 86 asthmatic subjects defined clinical features of irritant-induced asthma and assessed the contributory role of an allergic predisposition. Three categories of asthma were evaluated: (1) occupational asthma due to a sensitizer (11 subjects, 13%); (2) irritant-induced asthma (54 persons, 63%); and (3) not occupational/environmental exposure-related asthma (21 subjects, 24%). Two distinct clinical presentations of irritant-induced asthma emerged: the first was sudden onset (29 subjects) and the second was not so sudden in onset (25 subjects). Sudden-onset, irritant-induced asthma was analogous to the reactive airways dysfunction syndrome. Clinical manifestations began immediately or within a few hours (always within 24 h) following an accidental, brief, and massive exposure. In contrast, for the not-so-sudden-onset asthma subjects, the causative irritant exposure was not brief, usually not massive, continued for >24 h, and the initiation of asthma took longer to evolve. Eighty-eight percent of individuals with not-so-sudden irritant-induced asthma displayed an atopy/allergy status (p
ISSN:0012-3692
1931-3543
DOI:10.1378/chest.113.1.42