Literature DB >> 20132975

Inflammation and airway function in the lung periphery of patients with stable asthma.

Sylvia Verbanck1, Daniel Schuermans, Walter Vincken.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An important role for exhaled nitric oxide (NO) measurement could be in the distinction between proximal and peripheral lung contributions to inflammation, with a particular interest for the alveolar lung zone and its implication on airway function.
OBJECTIVE: We aimed to isolate the acinar lung zone contribution to both inflammation and airway function to seek a relationship between them.
METHODS: In 30 patients with asthma with an asthma control test score exceeding 20, indices of conductive and acinar ventilation heterogeneity (Scond, Sacin) were obtained from a multiple breath washout. NO production in the conductive airways (J'aw(NO)), alveolar NO concentration (CA(NO)), and the standard exhaled NO at 50 mL/s (FENO(50)) were obtained from exhaled NO.
RESULTS: Scond was consistently abnormal in all patients with stable asthma, but without any correlation to inflammation abnormality in that compartment (J'aw(NO)). Sacin was particularly abnormal in the asthma subgroup receiving >500 microg budesonide equivalent, and a correlation was found between Sacin and CA(NO) (r = 0.61; P = .015); in this subgroup, a weak association was found between Scond and J'aw(NO) or FENO(50) (r = 0.50; P = .059 for both).
CONCLUSION: The persistent functional abnormality of small conductive airways in patients with stable asthma is largely independent of inflammation as measured by exhaled NO. In the alveolar compartment, a functional correlate of alveolar NO was found in a subgroup of patients with stable asthma on moderate-to-high maintenance doses of inhaled steroids. These patients in particular could benefit from novel therapies specifically aimed at improving airway functionality at the level of the acinar entrance and beyond.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20132975     DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2009.10.053

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol        ISSN: 0091-6749            Impact factor:   10.793


  6 in total

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Authors:  Kirk Kee; Christopher Stuart-Andrews; Kris Nilsen; Jeremy P Wrobel; Bruce R Thompson; Matthew T Naughton
Journal:  Physiol Rep       Date:  2015-10

Review 6.  Techniques of assessing small airways dysfunction.

Authors:  William McNulty; Omar S Usmani
Journal:  Eur Clin Respir J       Date:  2014-10-17
  6 in total

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