{ "id": "129ebf8c-6e7f-4221-9fda-f63d23907055", "disease": { "id": "H00079", "names": [ "Asthma" ], "dbLinks": { "icd10": [ "J45" ], "mesh": [ "D001249" ] }, "category": "Immune system disease", "description": "Asthma is a complex syndrome with many clinical phenotypes in both adults and children. Its major characteristics include a variable degree of airflow obstruction, bronchial hyperresponsiveness, and airway inflammation. Inhaled allergens encounter antigen presenting cells (APC) that line the airway. Upon recognition of the antigen and activation by APC, naive T cells differentiate into TH2 cells. Activated TH2 stimulate the formation of IgE by B cells. IgE molecules bind to IgE receptors located on mast cells. The crosslinking of mast-cell-bound IgE by allergens leads to the release of biologically active mediators (histamine, leukotrienes) by means of degranulation and, so, to the immediate symptoms of allergy. Mast cells also release chemotactic factors that contribute to the recruitment of inflammatory cells, particularly eosinophils, whose proliferation and differentiation from bone marrow progenitors is promoted by IL-5. The activation of eosinophils leads to release of toxic granules and oxygen free radicals that lead to tissue damage and promote the development of chronic inflammation." }, "article": { "id": "1395752", "text": "To determine the possibility that asymptomatic bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR) develops into symptomatic asthma, a two-year follow-up study was conducted in 81 students (48 male, 33 female; 11 to 17 years) who were found to have BHR in a 3,067 population survey (BHR group). Eighty-eight age-matched students (48 male, 40 female) with normal bronchial responsiveness served as control subjects. Daily symptom cards were recorded. Peak expiratory flow rate was measured for 24 h when symptoms occurred. Histamine inhalation tests were performed at the beginning of the study and at the end of the first and the second year. In the BHR group, 58 students remained bronchial hyperresponsive at the end of follow-up. Nine of 31 students with initially diagnosed bronchial asthma had their symptoms relieved entirely, but ten asymptomatic students developed asthma. The incidence of newly diagnosed asthma (12.5 percent in the BHR group or 20 percent in the asymptomatic BHR group) and the total percentage of diagnosed asthma (39.5 percent) in the BHR group were significantly higher than those (2.27 percent, 2.27 percent) in the control group. FVC and FEV1 showed no significant difference between two groups. PD20 FEV1 values in newly diagnosed asthmatics were significantly lower than those in asymptomatic students both at the beginning (3.05 +/- 1.56 mumol vs 6.14 +/- 1.60 mumol, p \u003c 0.05) or the end (3.47 +/- 1.73 mumol vs 6.55 +/- 1.51 mumol, p \u003c 0.05). The percentage of early respiratory illness was significantly higher in those with newly diagnosed asthma (80 percent) than in asymptomatic students (22.3 percent), but atopic index and the percentage of parental asthma showed no difference between two groups. In nine asthmatics whose symptoms were relieved entirely in the two-year follow-up, PD20 FEV1 was undetectable within the cumulative dose of 7.8 mumol of histamine in three students and rose from 4.58 +/- 1.85 mumol to 7.62 +/- 1.02 mumol in the remaining six. The higher the BHR, the more likely the students developed asthma. About 45 percent of asymptomatic students with PD20 \u003c or = 3.2 mumol developed asthma in the following two years and 80 percent of them had a history of early respiratory illness, suggesting that they may have subclinical or potential asthma." }, "questions": [ { "id": "52873524-3416-4030-a8eb-d5c1f15295b2", "text": "What are the risk factors of Asthma?", "answers": [ { "answer_start": 1048, "text": "BHR" }, { "answer_start": 2001, "text": "BHR" } ] } ] }