Adriana Muiño, Ana Maria Baptista Menezes, Felipe Fossati Reichert,
Rodrigo Pereira Duquia, Moema Chatkin
Objective: To study the prevalence of wheezing patterns and their associations with independent variables. Methods: Cohort study of live
births in 1993 in Pelotas, Brazil. A systematic subsample (20%) of the original cohort was evaluated at 6 months, 12 months and 4 years.
At 10-12 years, 87.5% of the original cohort was contacted. Wheezing was categorized: transient, wheezing at 4 years but not at 10-12;
persistent, wheezing at all evaluations; late-onset, wheezing at 10-12 years. Independent variables were analyzed: gender; skin color; family
income; smoking/asthma during pregnancy; breastfeeding; respiratory infection/diarrhea (during the 1st year); family members with asthma/
allergy (at 4 years and at 10-12); physician-diagnosed rhinitis/eczema (at 10-12 years). Results: The subsample comprised 897 adolescents.
Wheezing patterns were expressed as prevalence (95% CI): transient, 43.9% (40.7-47.2); persistent, 6.4% (4.8-8.0); and late-onset, 3.3%
(2.2-4.5). The transient pattern was more common in children from low-income families, children breastfed for less time, children with a
history of respiratory infections (during the 1st year) and children with asthma in the family (at 4 years). The persistent pattern was almost
twice as common in males, in children whose mothers had asthma during pregnancy, in children with respiratory infections (during the 1st
year) and in children with asthma in the family (at 4 and 10-12 years). The late-onset pattern was more prevalent among those with asthma
in the family (at 10-12 years) and those diagnosed with rhinitis (at 10-12 years), being less prevalent among those reporting respiratory
infections (during the 1st year) and those diagnosed with eczema (at 10-12 years). Conclusions: Knowledge of the associations of wheezing
patterns allows us to adopt preventive and therapeutic measures.
Keywords: Respiratory sounds; Asthma; Epidemiology; Hypersensitivity.