The continuous laryngoscopy exercise test was easy to perform, well tolerated, and can be implemented in future diagnostic work-up programs of laryngeal dysfunction.
Variable obstruction to airflow at the laryngeal level may cause respiratory distress during exercise. The Continuous Laryngoscopy Exercise (CLE)-test enables direct visualization of the larynx during ongoing exercise. The aims of this study were to establish a scoring system for laryngeal obstruction as visualized during the CLE-test as well as to assess reliability and validity of this scoring system. Continuous video recording of the larynx was performed in parallel with continuous video recording of the upper part of the body, and recording of breath sounds in 80 patients and 20 symptom-negative volunteers, running on a treadmill to respiratory maximal tolerable distress or exhaustion. Each participant scored the degree of symptoms during exercise. The scoring system contains four sub-scores, each graded from 0 to 3. Two independent laryngologists, blinded to clinical data, scored the video recordings of the larynx twice. The proportion of inter- and intra-observer agreement (equal scores) for each sub-score through these four sessions varied between 70 and 100% (weighted kappa values varied from 0.49 to 1.00 correspondingly). A positive correlation was found between CLE-test sum score and symptom score (rho = 0.75, P < 0.001). There was a significant difference in CLE-test sum score between patients (3.34 +/- 1.34) and volunteers (0.65 +/- 0.66) (P < 0.001). The single CLE-test sub-score that correlated most strongly with symptom score was glottic adduction at maximal effort (rho = 0.75, P < 0.001). The presented scoring system is reliable and valid, and we suggest that it can be used when laryngeal function during exercise is evaluated.
Larynx can safely be studied throughout a maximum intensity exercise treadmill test. A characteristic laryngeal response pattern to exercise was visualised in a large proportion of patients with suspected upper airway obstruction. Laryngoscopy during ongoing symptoms is recommended for proper assessment of these patients.
Asthma-like symptoms and airway hyper-responsiveness (AHR) are frequently reported in children subsequent to premature birth and bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). There is limited knowledge on the mechanisms underlying these respiratory manifestations. Generally, childhood asthma and AHR is described within a context of inheritance, allergy and eosinophilic airway inflammation, and often in relation to cigarette exposures. We investigated these factors in relation to current asthma and AHR in a population-based cohort of 81 young people, born with gestational age < or = 28 wk or birth weight < or = 1000 g, and in a matched term-born control population. In the pre-term population, asthma and AHR were additionally studied in relation to neonatal respiratory morbidity. At follow up, more pre-term than control subjects had asthma. Forced expiratory volume in first second (FEV1) was reduced, AHR was substantially increased, and the level of the urinary leukotriene metabolite E4 (U-LTE4) was increased in the pre-term population compared to the term-born. In control subjects, asthma and AHR was associated with a pattern consistent with inheritance, allergy, airway inflammation, and cigarette exposures. In the pre-terms, asthma and AHR was either unrelated or less related to these factors. Instead, AHR was strongly related to a neonatal history of BPD and prolonged requirement for oxygen treatment. In conclusion, asthma and AHR subsequent to extremely premature birth differed from typical childhood asthma with respect to important features, and AHR was best explained by neonatal variables. These respiratory manifestations thus seem to represent a separate clinical entity.
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