Daily in-bedroom use of a PM2.5 filter results in significant improvement of airway mechanics
TUESDAY, May 26, 2020 (HealthDay News) — Daily use of a fine particulate matter air filtration device can significantly improve airway mechanics and reduce airway resistance in children with asthma, according to a study recently published in JAMA Pediatrics.
Xiaoxing Cui, Ph.D., of the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, and colleagues performed a double-blind study of 43 children with mild-to-moderate asthma (ages ranging from 5 to 13 years) to test the efficacy of daily use of a fine particle (generalized particulate matter 2.5 µm in size [PM2.5]) filter device. The authors initiated random placement of a working PM2.5 filtration device and a placebo filtration device within the children’s bedrooms for two weeks, incorporating a two-week washout interval period.
The researchers found that while using the PM2.5 filtration device, the concentrations of PM2.5 within the bedrooms were a mean (SD) of 63.4 percent (35.9 percent) lower than when the placebo filter was used. The use of a true filter also incrementally improved airway mechanics, shown in peak expiratory flow (1.6 percent) and fractional exhaled nitric oxide (a 27.6 percent reduction). Additionally, the children exhibited a reduction in total airway resistance of 24.4 percent, a reduction of 43.5 percent in small airway resistance, a reduction of 22.2 percent in resonant frequency, and an increase of 73.1 percent in airway reactance.
“These observations support a future clinical trial to assess the efficacy and effectiveness of indoor air filtration in improving small airway pathophysiology that plays a vital role in asthma,” the authors write.
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