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Asthma and the Influence of Nutritional Science.
 
   

 


Women, Fat, Muscle, the Immune System and Asthma

 


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Asthma and Obesity 

The Nurses Health Study II, a prospective study of 116,678 female nurses found that the more overweight a nurse was, the greater her risk of developing asthma in adulthood. 

Dr. Carmago and associates tracked the 89,061 who did not have asthma in 1991 and found that 1,652 developed asthma between 1991 and 1995. 

Those who were most obese in 1991 were three times as likely to develop asthma as those who were the least overweight.

The researchers reported that this large, prospective cohort study demonstrated that high BMI and weight gain since age 18 are associated with increased risk of developing adult-onset asthma.

"These data add to existing evidence that excess body fat is a major cause of human disease and suggest a new avenue for asthma management and prevention.... The increasing prevalence of obesity in developed nations may help explain concomitant increases in asthma prevalence."138

In an accompanying editorial, concerns were raised about the study's methods, interpretation of statistical "associations," and the possible existence of unrecognized cofactor(s). 

"If future studies support a convincing and real association between asthma and obesity, our speculation is that it will most likely be via an indirect mechanism or through the presence of some cofactor," wrote editorialist Mark M. Wilson, MD.139

  In a second study, it was observed that the most overweight 26-year-olds were 80% likely to have asthma than the thinnest.


A Connection Between Immunity and Obesity

The connection between overweight and depressed immune systems was made in the mid-eighties, when a vital clue to immunity was uncovered by brilliant research in an unexpected discipline - biochemistry. 

Biochemists established that all cell replication in the immune system, and therefore all immune strength, is dependent on the availability of the amino acid glutamine. 

Although the immune system utilizes huge amounts of glutamine, immune cells cannot make it. Only muscle cells are capable of producing glutamine. 

So, your muscles have to supply large amounts of glutamine to your immune system every day in order to maintain it. 

Therefore, muscle loss results in a corresponding loss of immunity. 

Between the ages of 20 and 40 the average American woman loses 8 lbs of muscle and gains 23 pounds of fat. 

By 40 her immunity is seriously compromised. 

Although the only long-term solution to proper muscle maintenance is weight-bearing exercise, glutamine can be increased through the addition of the branched chain amino acids, leucine, isoleucine and valine. Best is ornithine-alpha-ketoglutarate (OKG), which provides the glutamine in a stable form without ammonia. 

Ketoisocaproate (KIC), the ammonia free form of leucine and OKG is considered to be among the best of the glutamine precursors.  

A study of 914 patients with asthma reported that women with asthma had more daytime and nighttime symptoms than men, along with worse quality of life, even though airflow obstruction was essentially the same in both sexes. 

The investigators found that women in the 35-55-year-old age bracket uniformly reported worse physical functioning on a quality of life scale, poorer social functioning and more bodily pain than men. The women also consumed more health care resources.140,141

Does the reduction of body fat reduce the symptoms of asthma? That is one of the questions the RAINS Study hopes to eventually answer.


Nutritional Deficiency and BMI

A study of the incidence and clinical significance of nutritional deficiencies in patients with emphysema undergoing lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS) reported that while a preoperative analysis of the serum nutritional indexes revealed no clinically significant differences between two groups (BMI was normal in 24 patients (47%), and 27 patients (53%) had a below normal BMI), postoperative levels were significantly lower in the low BMI group.Clinically, 26% of the patients in the low BMI group required prolonged ventilatory support, compared to only 4% of the patients with a normal BMI. 

The hospital length of stay (LOS) also differed, averaging 15.9 days in the low BMI group, compared to an average of 11.8 days in the normal BMI group. The researchers concluded that approximately 50% of patients undergoing LVRS for emphysema have a deficient nutritional status identifiable by BMI, but not by standard nutritional indexes. 

This impaired nutritional status is associated with increased morbidity following LVRS. 

They suggest that BMI is an accurate determinant of nutritional status in this patient population, and speculate that preoperative repletion of nutritional deficiencies may decrease hospital morbidity, hospital LOS, and overall costs in the malnourished population undergoing LVRS.142


 

 

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