American Journal of Internal Medicine

Special Issue

New Approaches to Manage Difficult-to-Control, Severe Asthma

  • Submission Deadline: 15 February 2020
  • Status: Submission Closed
  • Lead Guest Editor: Yurii Feshchenko
About This Special Issue
Asthma is chronic heterogeneous disease, affecting 1-18 % of the population. According WHO Global Burden of Disease Study, 13, 8 million disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) are lost annually due to asthma, representing 1, 8 % of the total global disease burden. The main economic and social burden falls on difficult-to-control, severe asthma - due to the medications, physician visits, hospitalizations, and cost of OCS side effects.
Difficult-to-control, severe asthma also placed a large physical, mental, emotional burden. Difficult-to-control asthma – multi-factor problem, and investigation of background reasons, biological, patient-dependent or social, connected with government policy, health care system is of high priority.
Comorbidities, modifiable risk factors, incorrect technique of inhalation, suboptimal adherence , deficiencies in continuity between GPs and specialists (not timely referral to a specialist in severe, atypical cases) aggravates it’s course of the disease and makes difficult to achieve good asthma control.
Active interest and research continues - in study of inflammation (special atypical inflammation in late adult onset), particularities of pulmonary function and it’s changes over time, localization of injury in airways in difficult-to-control, severe asthma patients, unsatisfactory response to full-fledged standard therapy.
Allergy, rhinitis, professional asthma, neurological, psychological problems (anxiety and depression), breathing disturbances during sleep – are in sphere of interest of modern asthma management and necessitates attraction of multidisciplinary team with participation of pulmonologists, allergologists, otolaryngologists and other specialists in indicated cases.
Established timely cooperation between GPs and specialists, personalized approach to therapy, allocation of risk factors for disability, death, prediction of adverse outcomes will improve effectiveness of asthma treatment with the fewer side effects.
We hope and expect that the insight the special issue will bring present scientific need, stimulate further research interest and create a platform for future scientific research and will be of interest and useful for GPs and specialists.

Aims and Scope:

  1. Difficult-to-control, severe asthma
  2. Cooperation between GPs and specialists
  3. Inflammation
  4. Pulmonary function
  5. Comorbidities
  6. Asthma management
Lead Guest Editor
  • Yurii Feshchenko

    Department of Pulmonology,State Organization “National Institute of Phthisiology and Pulmonology named after F.G. Yanovskiy, National Academy of Medical Science of Ukraine”, Shupic National Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education, Kyiv, Ukraine

Guest Editors
  • Anzhela Basanets

    Clinic for Occupational Diseases, Institute for Occupational Health, Kyiv, Ukraine

  • Olena Rechkina

    Department of Pediatric Pulmonology and Allergology,State Organization “National Institute of Phthisiology and Pulmonology named after F.G. Yanovskiy, National Academy of Medical Science of Ukraine”, Kyiv, Ukraine

  • Tetyana Pertseva

    State Institution “Dnipropetrovsk Medical Academy Ministry of Health of Ukraine”, Dnipro, Ukraine

  • Yuriy Mostovoi

    Department of propaedeutics in the internal medicine,Vinnitsa National Memorial Medical University named after M.I. Pyrogov Ministry of Health of Ukraine, Vinnitsa, Ukraine

  • Mycola Ostrovskyy

    State Higher Educational institution "Ivano-Frankivsk National Medical University", Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine

  • Liudmyla Iashyna

    Department of Diagnostic, Therapy and Clinical Pharmacology of Lung Diseases,State Organization “National Institute of Phthisiology and Pulmonology named after F.G. Yanovskiy, National Academy of Medical Science of Ukraine”, Kyiv, Ukraine