| Literature DB >> 21437230 |
Abstract
Liquefaction is one of the most intriguing aspects of human tuberculosis. It is a major cause of the transition from the infection to active disease (tuberculosis, TB) as well as the transmission of M. tuberculosis to other persons. This paper reviews the natural history of liquefaction in humans from a pathological and radiological point of view and discusses how the experimental models available can be used to address the topic of liquefaction and cavity formation. Different concepts that have been related to liquefaction, from the influence of immune response to mechanical factors, are reviewed. Synchronic necrosis or apoptosis of infected macrophages in a close area, together with an ineffective fibrosis, appears to be clue in this process, in which macrophages, the immune response, and bacillary load interact usually in a particular scenario: the upper lobes of the lung. The summary would be that even if being a stochastic effect, liquefaction would result if the organization of the intragranulomatous necrosis (by means of fibrosis) would be disturbed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21437230 PMCID: PMC3061317 DOI: 10.1155/2011/868246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
The factors involved in liquefaction.
| (A) The upper lobes are privileged sites |
| (1) because of their low perfusion/ventilation ratio, which results in: |
| (a) an increase in bacillary growth inside individual alveolar macrophages due to the high oxygen pressure in the alveolar space, |
| (b) local alkalosis, and thus inhibition of dendritic cell maturation, |
| (c) decreased local perfusion, thus delaying the presentation of antigens at the local lymph nodes, |
| (2) the mechanical stress of ventilation makes stabilization of a fibrotic lesion more difficult. |
| (B) The fibrinolytic ability of the macrophages. |
| (C) Immune response |
| (1) as a result of the synchronic effect, which provokes a massive apoptosis/necrosis of infected macrophages in a short period of time, |
| (2) induction of high levels of IFN- |
| (3) promotion of a massive entry of macrophages into the lesions. |
| (D) Extracellular bacillary accumulation |
| (1) the accumulation of plasminogen and its activation to plasmin induces fibrinolysis and allows the maintenance of the liquefaction |
| through time, |
| (2) generation of a mantle of infected macrophages which maintains the inflammatory response. |
Figure 1Interactions between the factors involved in the liquefaction process. The colour of the arrows shows the ability to induce a process (in gray) or inhibit it (in red), and the thickness of the arrow is proportional to the intensity of this induction. The upper lobe appears to be the sine qua non condition for the process to take place. Macrophage (MΦ) activation and the presence of CD4 is linked to the appearance of different cytokines with time: TNF initially, followed by IFN-γ and IL-4, and TGF-β from the onset and peaking at the chronic phase. All those cytokines are profibrotic (in violet) except for IFN-γ (in yellow). This site mainly undergoes a profibrotic process although there is also a nonspecific antifibrotic effect arising from the macrophages and their enzymatic activity. Extracellular bacilli also have antifibrotic activity and promote macrophage activation although they are also thought to inhibit such activation to some extent. Fibrosis prevents liquefaction whereas liquefaction is promoted by macrophages, the immune response, by promoting the apoptosis of infected macrophages, and extracellular bacilli. Liquefaction induces cavitation, inhibits macrophage activation (indeed, it appears to destroy them), and promotes extracellular bacillary growth. Overall, liquefaction comes first, and then the extracellular multiplication of bacilli occurs. Fibrosis, and thus resume of the liquefaction, would occur only after the number of extracellular bacilli is reduced sufficiently to allow attempts at healing to take place. Finally, a large number of extracellular bacilli results in tissue destruction, cavity formation, and the death of the macrophages that attempt to inhibit such bacillary growth.