Depression in children with asthma: Testing a cholinergically mediated “endotype”
Heather K. Lehman, Beatrice L. Wood, Quratulain Humayun, Weyman Lam, Bruce D. Miller

TL;DR
The study explores whether children with asthma and depression have a specific asthma subtype that responds better to anticholinergic treatments.
Contribution
The study identifies a potential asthma endotype linked to depression, which may respond differently to anticholinergic therapy.
Findings
Higher depressive symptoms correlate with increased airway responsiveness to ipratropium in children with asthma.
Children with more depressive symptoms showed a significant improvement in FEV1 after anticholinergic treatment.
The findings suggest a possible asthma endotype associated with depression that may benefit from anticholinergic therapies.
Abstract
Asthma is not a single uniform disease; instead, it comprises various disease sub entities, or “endotypes,” with different etiologies and pathophysiologies. As asthma endotypes are discerned, individuals with asthma can be matched with optimal therapies for their specific asthma subtype. Depression is common in persons with asthma and associated with increased asthma-related morbidity and mortality. Depression in child asthma is associated with a predominance of parasympathetic/cholinergic activation over sympathetic activation. Cholinergic activity mediates airway smooth muscle constriction and has effects on airway inflammatory cells and mucus-secreting goblet cells. The goal of the current study was to examine whether children with asthma who have more depressive symptoms have cholinergically mediated disease that is differentially responsive to short-acting anticholinergic therapy.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAsthma and respiratory diseases · Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
