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(Chest. 2003;124:18-24.)
© 2003 American College of Chest Physicians

Wheezy Bronchitis in Childhood*

A Distinct Clinical Entity With Lifelong Significance?

Carole A. Edwards, MA; Liesl M. Osman, PhD; David J. Godden, MD and J. Graham Douglas, BSc, MB, ChB

* From the Respiratory Unit (Ms. Edwards, and Drs. Osman and Douglas), Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen, Scotland; and Highland & Islands Health Research Institute (Dr. Godden), Beechwood Business Park North, Inverness, Scotland.

Correspondence to: Graham Douglas, BSc, MB,ChB, Chest Clinic, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen, AB25 2ZN, Scotland; e-mail: j.g.douglas{at}arh.grampian.scot.nhs.uk

Background: Historically, clinicians have recognized the existence of the clinical syndrome of childhood wheezy bronchitis. In the late 1960s, children with this syndrome were relabeled as having asthma, and the term wheezy bronchitis was abandoned. In a 1989 study of a cohort that originally had been studied in 1964, we reported that those who had childhood wheezy bronchitis had as adults attained lung function similar to that of healthy control subjects and had less significant symptoms than did those who had experienced childhood asthma, in whom lung function was reduced. In this study, we reexamined these subjects 12 years later to determine whether the improved outcome of the wheezy bronchitis group had been maintained.

Methods: In 2001, we followed up the 283 participants of the 1989 study, who were now aged 45 to 50 years. In interviews, respiratory symptoms and smoking status were assessed. Spirometry was measured.

Results: One hundred seventy-seven subjects (63%) completed the study. After adjusting for age, height, gender, socioeconomic status, smoking status, and number of pack-years smoked, the current FEV1 in the childhood asthma group (mean, 2.45 L; 95% confidence interval, 2.29 to 2.62) was significantly lower than the wheezy bronchitis group (2.78 L, 95% confidence interval, 2.64 to 2.91; p < 0.01) and the control group (2.96 L; 95% confidence interval, 2.83 to 3.1; p < 0.01). The difference between the wheezy bronchitis group and the control subjects was not significant (p = 0.06). Between 1989 and 2001, both the childhood wheezy bronchitis group (p < 0.01) and the childhood asthma group (p = 0.01) had greater declines in FEV1 than did the control group (asthma group decline, - 0.75 L [95% confidence interval, - 0.66 to - 0.84]; wheezy bronchitis group decline, - 0.75 L [95% confidence interval, - 0.68 to - 0.83]; control group decline, - 0.59 L [95% confidence interval, - 0.52 to - 0.67]). In 2001, the asthma group had more symptoms than did the wheezy bronchitis group (p < 0.01), who were more symptomatic than the control group (p < 0.01).

Conclusion: Those with childhood wheezy bronchitis, having achieved normal lung function in earlier adulthood, now show a more rapid decline in lung function than did control subjects. If this rate of decline persists, these subjects may develop obstructive airways disease in later life.

Key Words: asthma • longitudinal study • lung function • respiratory symptoms • wheezy bronchitis




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