The Asian Age

Women with asthma may get chronic lung diseases

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Washington: — ANI According to a study, more than four in 10 women with asthma are more likely to develop the chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease ( COPD). COPD is a chronic inflammato­ry lung disease that obstructs airflow from the lungs. The researcher­s at American Thoracic Society examined risk factors for developing asthma and COPD overlap syndrome, known as ACOS. Those who develop ACOS experience increased exacerbati­ons and hospitalis­ations and have a lower quality of life, compared to those who have asthma or COPD alone. The authors reported that individual risk factors played a more significan­t role in the developmen­t of ACOS than exposure to fine particulat­e matter, a major air pollutant that because of its microscopi­c size penetrates deep into the lungs. Women who had a more than five- pack- year smoking history, meant that they had smoked more than the equivalent of a pack of cigarettes a day for five years. However, ACOS did not affect only those who smoke: 38 percent of the women who developed ACOS in the study had never smoked. In addition to smoking, the study identified obesity, rural residence, lower education levels and unemployme­nt as significan­t risk factors for ACOS. The authors speculated that these factors indicative of low socioecono­mic status may result in suboptimal access to care, under- treatment of asthma and poor compliance with medication­s, all of which lead to more frequent asthma attacks. These attacks, in turn, may lead to airway remodellin­g that increases the chances of developing ACOS. The researcher­s noted that they lacked the data to investigat­e this associatio­n

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