An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in Children

Nocturnal asthma (NA) is increasing in prevalence, affecting millions of people worldwide. In addition to being associated with increased mortality, NA is associated with a decreased quality of life. NA associated sleep disturbances and increased daytime sleepiness are especially important in childr...

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Main Author: Darrell Ginsberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: McGill University 2020-12-01
Series:McGill Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://mjm.mcgill.ca/article/view/354
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spelling doaj-d452ffd0820b4f39b2b3d538a71aeebc2021-01-22T03:41:59ZengMcGill UniversityMcGill Journal of Medicine1715-81252020-12-011218810.26443/mjm.v12i1.354569An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in ChildrenDarrell Ginsberg0Department of Cellular Biology and Anatomy Technion – Israel Institute of Technology Faculty of MedicineNocturnal asthma (NA) is increasing in prevalence, affecting millions of people worldwide. In addition to being associated with increased mortality, NA is associated with a decreased quality of life. NA associated sleep disturbances and increased daytime sleepiness are especially important in children due to the accompanying behavioral and developmental difficulties. As diurnal spirometry is not a practical tool for the diagnosis and monitoring of NA, self or parental reports are used. Children underreport and underestimate their NA symptoms and parents are not fully aware of their child’s NA indicators. In addition, there is the lack of physician familiarity regarding the assessment and treatment of NA. Therefore, NA is chronically underreported. The development of a non-invasive, objective, home-based diagnostic tool is crucial in diagnosing and monitoring children with NA. The presence of wheeze during sleep has been successfully employed as a tool to measure NA in children. This review discusses the increasing prevalence of NA, current diagnostic tools and the consequences of undiagnosed NA in children. In conclusion, this paper suggests that an automated wheeze detective device is an objective and practical tool to aid the diagnosis and monitoring of NA.https://mjm.mcgill.ca/article/view/354nocturnal asthmasleep disturbanceschildrenwheeze
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Darrell Ginsberg
spellingShingle Darrell Ginsberg
An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in Children
McGill Journal of Medicine
nocturnal asthma
sleep disturbances
children
wheeze
author_facet Darrell Ginsberg
author_sort Darrell Ginsberg
title An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in Children
title_short An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in Children
title_full An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in Children
title_fullStr An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in Children
title_full_unstemmed An Unidentified Monster in the Bed – Assessing Nocturnal Asthma in Children
title_sort unidentified monster in the bed – assessing nocturnal asthma in children
publisher McGill University
series McGill Journal of Medicine
issn 1715-8125
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Nocturnal asthma (NA) is increasing in prevalence, affecting millions of people worldwide. In addition to being associated with increased mortality, NA is associated with a decreased quality of life. NA associated sleep disturbances and increased daytime sleepiness are especially important in children due to the accompanying behavioral and developmental difficulties. As diurnal spirometry is not a practical tool for the diagnosis and monitoring of NA, self or parental reports are used. Children underreport and underestimate their NA symptoms and parents are not fully aware of their child’s NA indicators. In addition, there is the lack of physician familiarity regarding the assessment and treatment of NA. Therefore, NA is chronically underreported. The development of a non-invasive, objective, home-based diagnostic tool is crucial in diagnosing and monitoring children with NA. The presence of wheeze during sleep has been successfully employed as a tool to measure NA in children. This review discusses the increasing prevalence of NA, current diagnostic tools and the consequences of undiagnosed NA in children. In conclusion, this paper suggests that an automated wheeze detective device is an objective and practical tool to aid the diagnosis and monitoring of NA.
topic nocturnal asthma
sleep disturbances
children
wheeze
url https://mjm.mcgill.ca/article/view/354
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