DutchNews, February
28, 2016
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| Photo: Depositphotos.com |
More
than half the children who have been diagnosed with asthma may not actually
have the respiratory condition, according to researchers at Utrecht
University’s teaching hospital.
The researchers studied the cases of almost
5,000 children aged between six and 18 and found that thousands had been
wrongly diagnosed. The main reason is that it is hard to establish asthma in
children under the age of six, research Theo Verheij told broadcaster Nos at
the weekend.
‘They are recorded as ‘probable diagnoses,’ Verheij said. ‘And
that label remains in their files.’
‘We are talking about children with few
complaints who disappear from the radar,’ Verheij said. ‘We are not talking
about children with a lot of symptoms and who use a lot of medicine.’
The
researchers looked at the medical files of 4,920 children, of whom 546 were
indicated as asthma sufferers. Of them, 39% were found to have asthma on the
basis of a spirometry test or the severity of their symptoms, Nos said.

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