Literature DB >> 2183579

Inflammation as a diagnostic keystone and its clinical implications, exemplified by the inflammatory bowel diseases.

P Riis1.   

Abstract

Inflammation is a complex process following sublethal injury to tissue and ends with permanent destruction of tissue or with healing. Inflammation has long, long roots in the evolutionary process and as a concept reaches far back in the history of medicine. Inflammation can not be viewed solely in a teleological perspective. Refined by phylogenesis it serves the integrity and survival of groups (species etc.) and not primarily individuals. Inflammation has, in the history of science, been studied on the macroscopic, the microscopic, the dynamic cellular, the immunological, the biochemical/physiological, and the molecular level. Clinicians have for centuries relied on inflammatory signs and symptoms in their diagnostics, even to the extent of being seriously confused, when a subject's inflammatory preparedness is disturbed, as in agranulocytosis, alcoholism, HIV-infection etc. Chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease) have been studied intensively by inflammologists. The results are partly exchangeable with studies in, for instance, chronic rheumatoid arthritis. They try to answer the over-all question in these diseases: Are we dealing with a normal inflammatory preparedness confronted with a special (unknown) agent, or an abnormal inflammatory preparedness confronted with an ubiquitous agent? The answer will form the basis for the future treatment of these patients, whose diseases remind us of inflammation as man's fellow traveller on "the long phylogenetic march".

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1990        PMID: 2183579     DOI: 10.1007/BF01964705

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Agents Actions        ISSN: 0065-4299


  7 in total

Review 1.  Neutrophilic granulocyte function. Quantitative leukocyte mobilization and function of circulating and exudative neutrophils.

Authors:  J H Wandall
Journal:  Dan Med Bull       Date:  1988-06

2.  In vitro studies on the significance of arachidonate metabolism and other oxidative processes in the inflammatory response of human neutrophils and macrophages. With special reference to chronic inflammatory bowel disease.

Authors:  O H Nielsen
Journal:  Scand J Gastroenterol Suppl       Date:  1988

Review 3.  Complement and function of neutrophils in chronic inflammatory bowel disease.

Authors:  J Elmgreen
Journal:  Dan Med Bull       Date:  1986-10

Review 4.  Concanavalin A induced suppressor activity exerted by peripheral blood mononuclear cells--with special reference to chronic inflammatory bowel disease.

Authors:  B D Davidsen
Journal:  Dan Med Bull       Date:  1988-06

5.  Saturation kinetics applied to in vitro effects of low prostaglandin E2 and F 2 alpha concentrations on ion transport across human jejunal mucosa.

Authors:  K Bukhave; J Rask-Madsen
Journal:  Gastroenterology       Date:  1980-01       Impact factor: 22.682

6.  Comparison of radioimmunological determinations with gas chromatography mass spectrometry dosage. A study of PGE2 and PGF2alpha in gastrointestinal fluids.

Authors:  K Bukhave; K Gréen; J Rask-Madsen
Journal:  Biomed Mass Spectrom       Date:  1983-04

7.  Prostaglandin E2 in jejunal fluids and its potential diagnostic value for selecting patients with indomethacin-sensitive diarrhoea.

Authors:  K Bukhave; J Rask-Madsen
Journal:  Eur J Clin Invest       Date:  1981-06       Impact factor: 4.686

  7 in total
  1 in total

Review 1.  Mucosal healing and deep remission: what does it mean?

Authors:  Gerhard Rogler; Stephan Vavricka; Alain Schoepfer; Peter L Lakatos
Journal:  World J Gastroenterol       Date:  2013-11-21       Impact factor: 5.742

  1 in total

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