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Study finds a high rate of asthma in college athletes

September 05, 2007

COLUMBUS, Ohio - More than a third of college athletes assessed for breathing problems had test results suggesting exercise-induced asthma, even in those athletes who had no previous history of asthma, a new study shows.

The findings, published in the September issue of the journal Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, paralleled earlier findings of a high prevalence of exercise-induced asthma among Olympic athletes. The work also underscores the need to develop more routine diagnosis and management tools in athletes to detect the potentially serious condition among athletes.




Researchers at Ohio State University Medical Center screened 107 Ohio State varsity athletes for exercise-induced asthma. Forty-two (39 percent) of the athletes tested positive, and 36 of those 42 athletes had no prior history of asthma.

The results suggest there are a significant number of athletes with unrecognized exercise-induced asthma. There were also many presentations of exercise-induced asthma, many of which were not classic cases, making diagnosis challenging.

Exercise-induced asthma occurs when airflow to the lungs is reduced due to narrowing and closing of the airways in association with exercise. This airway obstruction usually occurs just after exercise.

"We targeted varsity athletes in this study because many of the reported severe episodes of asthma provoked by exercise have occurred among competitive athletes under the age of 21," said Jonathan Parsons, a pulmonologist and associate director of the Medical Center's Asthma Center and lead author of the study. "Now that we've demonstrated how common this problem can be, more research is needed to determine the best way to monitor and manage athletes at the highest risk of developing symptoms while participating in their sports."

To stress the lungs, the researchers used eucapnic voluntary hyperpnea testing, a technique which has proved to be a sensitive test for diagnosing exercise-induced asthma. The test involves challenging or stressing the lungs by making the person hyperventilate, then measuring their lung function to determine if it decreases from the stress, mimicking the expected changes in exercise-induced asthma.

"Varsity athletes show a high incidence of exercise-induced asthma when they are objectively diagnosed using a variety of pulmonary function criteria," says Parsons. "Previous studies on college athletes did not utilize the eucapnic voluntary hypernea technique, which is the International Olympic Committee's test of choice in documenting exercise-induced asthma, so our specific aim was to use this method throughout our investigation."

"One important finding of this study is that a history of symptoms with exercise is not enough to make a correct diagnosis," said Parsons. "Diagnosis and treatment of exercise-induced asthma based solely upon subjective symptoms could increase the number of inaccurate diagnoses and expose people to unnecessary medications."

"Objective confirmation of suspected exercise-induced asthma with appropriate testing is absolutely critical," adds Parsons.

Researchers found that neither the sex of the athlete nor the breathing demands of the sport affected the prevalence of exercise-induced asthma, according to Parsons.

Exercise is one of the most common triggers of bronchospasm in patients with chronic asthma, with exercise-induced asthma occurring in approximately 80 percent to 90 percent of individuals with known asthma. In addition, one out of every 10 people has no classic features of chronic asthma, yet still experience symptoms of asthma during exercise.

The dangers of exercise-induced asthma can vary from a mild impairment of performance to serious respiratory problems.

Along with Parsons, other Ohio State researchers involved in the study were John Mastronarde, Christopher Kaeding, Gary Phillips, David Jarjoura and Gail Wadley.

Funding from The Chest Foundation, which is a part of the American College of Chest Physicians, and a grant from the National Institutes of Health, supported this research.

Ohio State University



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