All Stories

  1. Higher parental education was associated with better asthma control
  2. Randomised study of children with obesity showed that whole body vibration reduced sclerostin
  3. Smoking in pregnancy and bed sharing, a fatal combination
  4. Reply to Mariam Zaidi
  5. René Laennec and the origins of the stethoscope
  6. Antibiotics in the first week of life were associated with atopic asthma at 12 years of age
  7. Eating fish and farm life reduce allergic rhinitis at the age of twelve
  8. It's all in the genes... well almost
  9. An index to predict asthma in wheezing young children produced promising initial results
  10. Area-based study shows most parents follow advice to reduce risk of sudden infant death syndrome
  11. Tony Foucard (1936-2008), a man of honour
  12. Petter Karlberg (1919-2006), a curious scientist
  13. Nobed sharing orsaferbed sharing?
  14. Bed sharing: the debate continues
  15. Teaching Parents How to Prevent Acquired Cranial Asymmetry in Infants
  16. Why it is important to present all the available facts about bed sharing and breastfeeding
  17. Breastfeeding and dummy use have a protective effect on sudden infant death syndrome
  18. Bed sharing is more common in sudden infant death syndrome than in explained sudden unexpected deaths in infancy
  19. A persistently high body mass index increases the risk of atopic asthma at school age
  20. Updated S wedish advice on reducing the risk of sudden infant death syndrome
  21. Gas, dust, and fumes exposure is associated with mite sensitization and with asthma in mite-sensitized adults
  22. Allergy in Children in Hand Versus Machine Dishwashing
  23. Aspirin-intolerant asthma in the population: prevalence and important determinants
  24. Decreased importance of environmental risk factors for childhood asthma from 1996 to 2006
  25. O-111 A Genome-wide Association Study Of Variants Associated With Genetic Susceptibility To Severe Bronchiolitis
  26. Impaired peripheral airway function in adults following repair of esophageal atresia
  27. High risk of adult asthma following severe wheezing in early life
  28. Antibiotics in the first week of life is a risk factor for allergic rhinitis at school age
  29. Diagnosis and treatment of bronchiolitis in Finnish and Swedish children's hospitals
  30. Five-fold increase in use of inhaled corticosteroids over 18 years in the general adult population in West Sweden
  31. Classification and pharmacological treatment of preschool wheezing: changes since 2008
  32. PD12 - Living on a farm protects from allergic rhinitis at school age
  33. PD05 - Asthma and allergy from infancy into school age – the allergic march revisited
  34. Alarmingly high prevalence of smoking and symptoms of bronchitis in young women in Sweden: a population-based questionnaire study
  35. Early fish introduction and neonatal antibiotics affect the risk of asthma into school age
  36. Multi-symptom asthma as an indication of disease severity in epidemiology
  37. High risk of adult asthma following severe wheeze in early life
  38. International consensus on (ICON) pediatric asthma
  39. Treatment of infant and preschool asthma
  40. Eczema among adults: prevalence, risk factors and relation to airway diseases. Results from a large-scale population survey in Sweden
  41. Questionnaire layout and wording influence prevalence and risk estimates of respiratory symptoms in a population cohort
  42. Rhinitis phenotypes correlate with different symptom presentation and risk factor patterns of asthma
  43. Adult-onset asthma in west Sweden – Incidence, sex differences and impact of occupational exposures
  44. Small airway function, exhaled NO and airway hyper-responsiveness in paediatric asthma
  45. Preschool wheeze - impact of early fish introduction and neonatal antibiotics
  46. Prenatal paracetamol exposure and risk of wheeze at preschool age*
  47. The prevalence of asthma has reached a plateau
  48. Long-term respiratory symptoms following oesophageal atresia
  49. Early protective and risk factors for allergic rhinitis at age 4½ yr
  50. Multi-symptom asthma as an indication of disease severity in epidemiology
  51. Respiratory Symptoms Measure
  52. Assessment of problematic severe asthma in children
  53. Bed-sharing among six-month-old infants in western Sweden
  54. Paracetamol - accumulating reports of an association with allergy and asthma
  55. Problematic severe asthma in children, not one problem but many: a GA2LEN initiative
  56. Growing up on a farm leads to lifelong protection against allergic rhinitis
  57. Asthma in late adolescence - farm childhood is protective and the prevalence increase has levelled off
  58. Low levels of exhaled nitric oxide are associated with impaired lung function in cystic fibrosis
  59. Paracetamol in pregnancy is not a risk factor for overall preschool wheezing disorder, but seems to be it for multiple-trigger wheeze
  60. Increased prevalence of otitis media following respiratory syncytial virus infection
  61. West Sweden Asthma Study: Prevalence trends over the last 18 years argues no recent increase in asthma
  62. Challenges to 21st century paediatrics
  63. What if it is the other way around? Early introduction of peanut and fish seems to be better than avoidance
  64. Clara cell protein 16 (CC16) serum levels in infants during respiratory syncytial virus infection
  65. To the Editors
  66. CC16 Inhibits the Migration of Eosinophils Towards the Formyl Peptide fMLF but not Towards PGD2
  67. Asthma and Allergy in Childhood: Prediction and Early Diagnosis
  68. Early introduction of fish decreases the risk of eczema in infants
  69. A real-life cost-effectiveness evaluation of budesonide/formoterol maintenance and reliever therapy in asthma
  70. SIDS diagnosis should not be put to bed
  71. Definition, assessment and treatment of wheezing disorders in preschool children: an evidence-based approach
  72. Neonatal Antibiotic Treatment Is a Risk Factor for Early Wheezing
  73. Reduced airway function in early adulthood among subjects with wheezing disorder before two years of age
  74. Reduced Adult Airway Function after Wheezing Early in Life
  75. Symbicort SMART - Effective Treatment at a Lower Cost
  76. The impact of early passive smoking on lung function in adulthood: a post-bronchiolitis study – Reply
  77. What factors determine future bronchial hyper-responsiveness following early wheezing?
  78. Clara cell 16-kd protein downregulates TH2 differentiation of human naive neonatal T cells
  79. Determinants of lung function and airway hyperresponsiveness in asthmatic children
  80. The impact of pre- and post-natal smoke exposure on future asthma and bronchial hyper-responsiveness
  81. Another new theory explaining the cause of SIDS
  82. Outcome of wheezing in early childhood
  83. Bradycardic response during submersion in infant swimming
  84. Stop SIDS - sleeping solitary supine, sucking soother, stopping smoking substitutes
  85. Asthma hospitalizations continue to decrease in schoolchildren but hospitalization rates for wheezing illnesses remain high in young children
  86. Born small for gestational age: relation to future allergy and asthma
  87. Circadian variations in sudden infant death syndrome: associations with maternal smoking, sleeping position and infections. The Nordic Epidemiological SIDS Study
  88. Asthma symptoms in early childhood - what happens then?
  89. Vitamin A and sudden infant death syndrome in Scandinavia 1992-1995
  90. Histamine provocation in young, awake children with bronchial asthma, using a fall in oxygenation as the only indicator of a bronchial reaction
  91. Sociodemographic risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome: associations with other risk factors
  92. Living conditions in early infancy in Denmark, Norway and Sweden 1992-95: results from the Nordic Epidemiological SIDS study
  93. Interactions of infectious symptoms and modifiable risk factors in sudden infant death syndrome. The Nordic Epidemiological SIDS study
  94. “One sometimes finds what one is not looking for” (Sir Alexander Fleming): the most important medical discovery of the 20th century
  95. SIDS risk factors and factors associated with prone sleeping in Sweden
  96. U-EPX levels and wheezing in infants and young children with and without RSV bronchiolitis
  97. Asthma symptoms in early childhood – what happens then?
  98. Stop SIDS – sleeping solitary supine, sucking soother, stopping smoking substitutes
  99. A23/165 – Neonatal antibiotic treatment as a risk factor for wheezing disorder at age twelve months
  100. H2/164 – SIDS risk factors and factors associated with prone sleeping in Sweden
  101. Respiratory syncytial virus and other respiratory viruses during the first 3 months of life promote a local Th2-like response
  102. Low levels of CC16 in nasal fluid of children with birch pollen-induced rhinitis
  103. Bet v 1-specific IgA increases during the pollen season but not after a single allergen challenge in children with birch pollen-induced intermittent allergic rhinitis
  104. Pros and cons of microarray technology in allergy research
  105. A role for neutrophils in intermittent allergic rhinitis
  106. Asthma symptoms in early childhood - what happened then?*1
  107. Prevention of sudden infant death syndrome
  108. Pediatric asthma in Sweden. Changes in management, hospitalization rates and mortality.
  109. Altered Levels of the Soluble IL-1, IL-4 and TNF Receptors, as well as the IL-1 Receptor Antagonist, in Intermittent Allergic Rhinitis
  110. Circadian variations in sudden infant death syndrome: associations with maternal smoking, sleeping position and infections.
  111. Inflammatory responses in respiratory syncytial virus and other viral infections in infants: Cytokines, chemokines, and eosinopilic cationic protein
  112. INCREASED EXPRESSION OF VASCULAR ENDOTHELIAL GROWTH FACTOR-A IN SEASONAL ALLERGIC RHINITIS
  113. Asthma hospitalizations continue to decrease in school children but remain high in young children
  114. Relationship between respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis and future obstructive airway diseases
  115. Prediction of outcome after wheezing in infancy
  116. Prediction of outcome after wheezing in infancy
  117. Prediction of outcome after wheezing in infancy
  118. Follow-up of asthma from childhood to adulthood
  119. Follow-up of asthma from childhood to adulthood
  120. Inflammatory mediators in blood and urine
  121. Topical steroid treatment of allergic rhinitis decreases nasal fluid TH2 cytokines, eosinophils, eosinophil cationic protein, and IgE but has no significant effect on IFN-γ, IL-1β, TNF-α, or neutrophils
  122. Increase of the Soluble IL-4 Receptor (IL-4sR) and Positive Correlation between IL-4sR and IgE in Nasal Fluids from School Children with Allergic Rhinitis
  123. Low levels of interferon-γ in nasal fluid accompany raised levels of T-helper 2 cytokines in children with ongoing allergic rhinitis
  124. 464 Expression of interleukin-4 with an early peak during allergic pollen rhinitis
  125. Interleukin-5 and interleukin-8 in relation to eosinophils and neutrophils in nasal fluids from school children with seasonal allergic rhinitis
  126. Caffeine and alcohol as risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome
  127. A case-control study of smoking and sudden infant death syndrome in the Scandinavian countries, 1992 to 1995
  128. Prevalence of allergy in children in relation to prior BCG vaccination and infection with atypical mycobacteria
  129. Sociodemographic risk factors for sudden infant death syndrome: associations with other risk factors
  130. Combined Effects of Sleeping Position and Prenatal Risk Factors in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome: The Nordic Epidemiological SIDS Study
  131. The decline in the incidence of SIDS in Scandinavia and its relation to risk-intervention campaigns
  132. Cytokines in nasal fluids from school children with seasonal allergic rhinitis
  133. Wheezing bronchitis reinvestigated at the age of 10 years
  134. Impact of viral infection on bronchial hyperresponsiveness
  135. Urinary eosinophil protein X in children with atopic asthma: A useful marker of antiinflammatory treatment
  136. Decrease in hospitalization for treatment of childhood asthma with increased use of antiinflammatory treatment, despite an increase in the prevalence of asthma†
  137. Nebulized budesonide for the treatment of moderate to severe asthma in infants and toddlers
  138. Inflammatory Markers in Childhood Asthma
  139. 413 Urinary eosinophil protein X (EPX) in children with atopic asthma. A useful marker of antiinflammatory treatment
  140. Leukotriene B4and C4generation by human leukocytes after ex vivo stimulation with Ca-ionophore and opsonized zymosan in children with atopic asthma
  141. Eosinophil cationic protein, myeloperoxidase and tryptase in children with asthma and atopic dermatitis
  142. Inhibitory effects of theophylline, terbutaline, and hydrocortisone on leukotriene B4 and C4 generation by human leukocytes in vitro
  143. Leukotriene B4and C4generation by blood leukocytes after ex vivo stimulation by Ca-ionophore and opsonized zymosan in children with atopic dermatitis
  144. Nebulised racemic adrenaline in the treatment of acute bronchiolitis in infants and toddlers.
  145. Laryngeal reflex
  146. Consensus statement on clinical management
  147. Longitudinal follow-up of growth in children born small for gestational age
  148. SIDS outdoors and seasonality in Sweden 1975–1987
  149. Transcutaneous blood gas monitoring during salbutamol inhalations in young children with acute asthmatic symptoms
  150. Characteristics and prognosis of hospital-treated obstructive bronchitis in children aged less than two years
  151. Clinical and Neurophysiological Development of Unverricht-Lundborg Disease in Four Swedish Siblings
  152. Nebulized Racemic Adrenaline for Wheezy Bronchitis
  153. Respiratory and arousal responses to hypoxia in apnoeic infants reinvestigated
  154. Hypoxia Reinforces Laryngeal Reflex Bradycardia in Infants
  155. ‘The cot in cot deaths’
  156. SIDS in Sweden
  157. The Epidemiology of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome and Attacks of Lifelessness in Sweden
  158. Transcutaneous Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide Levels and a Clinical Symptom Scale for Monitoring the Acute Asthmatic State in Infants and Young Children
  159. Manual Breast Pumps Promote Successful Breast Feeding
  160. Neonatal breathing control mediated via the central chemoreceptors
  161. A CASE OF NEAR-MISS SIDS DEVELOPING AN ABNORMAL RESPIRATORY REACTION TO HYPOXIA
  162. Reflex cardiovascular responses to graded stimulations of low- and high-threshold afferents in the carotid sinus and aortic nerves in the cat
  163. Respiratory effects elicited in newborn animals via the central chemoreceptors
  164. Cardiovascular effects elicited from the ventral surface of medulla oblongata in the cat
  165. The role of cardiac receptors in clonidine-induced vagal bradycardia
  166. Cardiac Receptors Activated during the Hypothalamic Defence Reaction
  167. Effects of Stimulation of Nonmedullated Cardiac Afferents on Renal Water and Sodium Excretion
  168. Cardiac Receptors in Ducks - A Link between Vasoconstriction and Bradycardia during Diving
  169. Interaction between the Hypothalamic Defence Reaction and Cardiac Ventricular Receptor Reflexes
  170. Studies on the Central Integration of Excitatory Chemoreceptor Influences and Inhibitory Baroreceptor and Cardiac Receptor Influences
  171. The Distribution of Sodium in Aortic Walls from Spontaneously Hypertensive and Normotensive Rats
  172. Aspects of the Central Integration of Arterial Baroreceptor and Cardiac Ventricular Receptor Reflexes in the Cat
  173. Effects of temperature on osmotic responses and on transmembrane efflux of urea and sodium in vascular smooth muscle cells
  174. The Effect of Stimulus Pattern on the Pressure Response to Electrical Stimulation of the Carotid Sinus Nerve of Cats
  175. Extent of Engagement of Various Cardiovascular Effectors to Alterations of Carotid Sinus Pressure
  176. Effective Transmitter Concentrations in the Rat Portal Vein as Reflected by Neurogenic Potentiation of Responses to Exogenous Noradrenaline
  177. Vasoconstrictor Fibre Discharge to Skeletal Muscle, Kidney, Intestine and Skin at Varying Levels of Arterial Baroreceptor Activity in the Cat