Journal Of Widya Medika Junior
Vol 4, No 3 (2022): July

CORRELATION BETWEEN TOTAL NASAL SYMPTOM SCORE AND CLASSIFICATION OF RHINITIS ALLERGY BASED ON ARIA-WHO WITH ASTHMA COMORBIDITY AT PHC HOSPITAL IN SURABAYA

Azzahra Shalsabila Yuwono (Faculty of Medicine, Widya Mandala Surabaya Catholic University)
Wiyono Hadi (Department of Head and Neck Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Widya Mandala Surabaya Catholic University)
Zenia Angelina (Department of Pediatric, Faculty of Medicine, Widya Mandala Surabaya Catholic University)



Article Info

Publish Date
29 Aug 2022

Abstract

Introduction: The prevalence of Rhinitis Allergy (RA) is quite high, reaching 32%. The incidence of RA is often associated with asthma, as many as 45% of asthmatics occur after RA, and as many as 20-50% of RA occur after asthma. If RA occurs together with asthma, it can exacerbate clinical symptoms for the patient. According to ARIA-WHO, RA is classified according to time, into intermittent and persistent, and based on the severity of symptoms and quality of life, divided into mild and moderate-severe. Currently, there is a short questionnaire, namely the Total Nasal Symptom Score (TNSS). TNSS is the sum of individual scores for each nasal symptom. Each symptom was measured using a score of 0 to 3.Purpose: To determine the correlation between TNSS and RA classification based on ARIA-WHO with asthma comorbidity at PHC Hospital in Surabaya.Method: This study used an observational analytic research design with a cross-sectional study design, with a sample size of 39. Statistical analysis was carried out using the Spearman Correlation test.Result: From 39 samples, female (59%) and male (41%), the highest age group was 46-55 years (28.2%), the most allergy history was allergy to cold and dust (67.9%), the highest degree of TNSS was mild (43.6%) followed by moderate (33.3%), then severe (12.8%) and very mild (10.3%). The highest degree of RA was persistent moderate-severe (51.3%), followed by mild persistent (17.9%), followed by intermittent mild and intermittent moderate-severe (15.4%). Based on the analysis results that have been carried out using the Spearman correlation test, the results are p = 0.000 (α = <0.05) and r = 0.566, showing a strong significant correlation.Conclusion: There is a strong significant correlation between TNSS and RA classification based on ARIA-WHO in RA patients with asthma comorbidity.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

JWMJ

Publisher

Subject

Medicine & Pharmacology Public Health

Description

Journal of Widya Medika Junioris our faculty's very first project in publishing the students' research, making them available for both students and faculty members to read. It is an endeavour to nurture our students' passion in doing scientific research through which process they will be encouraged ...